| Literature DB >> 29653491 |
Rolf Wagner1, John T Randolph1, Sachin V Patel1, Lissa Nelson1, Mark A Matulenko1, Ryan Keddy1, John K Pratt1, Dachun Liu1, A Chris Krueger1, Pamela L Donner1, Douglas K Hutchinson1, Charles Flentge1, David Betebenner1, Todd Rockway1, Clarence J Maring1, Teresa I Ng1, Preethi Krishnan1, Tami Pilot-Matias1, Christine Collins1, Neeta Panchal1, Thomas Reisch1, Tatyana Dekhtyar1, Rubina Mondal1, DeAnne F Stolarik1, Yi Gao1, Wenqing Gao1, David A Beno1, Warren M Kati1.
Abstract
Curative interferon and ribavirin sparing treatments for hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patients require a combination of mechanistically orthogonal direct acting antivirals. A shared component of these treatments is usually an HCV NS5A inhibitor. First generation FDA approved treatments, including the component NS5A inhibitors, do not exhibit equivalent efficacy against HCV virus genotypes 1-6. In particular, these first generation NS5A inhibitors tend to select for viral drug resistance. Ombitasvir is a first generation HCV NS5A inhibitor included as a key component of Viekira Pak for the treatment of patients with HCV genotype 1 infection. Since the launch of next generation HCV treatments, functional cure for genotype 1-6 HCV infections has been achieved, as well as shortened treatment duration across a wider spectrum of genotypes. In this paper, we show how we have modified the anchor, linker, and end-cap architecture of our NS5A inhibitor design template to discover a next generation NS5A inhibitor pibrentasvir (ABT-530), which exhibits potent inhibition of the replication of wild-type genotype 1-6 HCV replicons, as well as improved activity against replicon variants demonstrating resistance against first generation NS5A inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29653491 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.8b00082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446