| Literature DB >> 29852069 |
Koushi Hidaka1, Tooru Kimura2, Rajesh Sankaranarayanan2, Jun Wang2, Keith F McDaniel3, Dale J Kempf3, Masanori Kameoka4, Motoyasu Adachi5, Ryota Kuroki6, Jeffrey-Tri Nguyen2, Yoshio Hayashi7, Yoshiaki Kiso8.
Abstract
The emergence of drug-resistant HIV from a widespread antiviral chemotherapy targeting HIV protease in the past decades is unavoidable and provides a challenge to develop alternative inhibitors. We synthesized a series of allophenylnorstatine-based peptidomimetics with various P3, P2, and P2́ moieties. The derivatives with P2 tetrahydrofuranylglycine (Thfg) were found to be potent against wild type HIV-1 protease and the virus, leading to a highly potent compound 21f (KNI-1657) against lopinavir/ritonavir- or darunavir-resistant strains. Co-crystal structures of 21f and the wild-type protease revealed numerous key hydrogen bonding interactions with Thfg. These results suggest that the strategy to design allophenylnorstatine-based peptidomimetics combined with Thfg residue would be promising for generating candidates to overcome multidrug resistance.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29852069 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.7b01709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446