| Literature DB >> 30768944 |
Tiffany C Edwards1, Nagraj Mani2, Bruce Dorsey3, Ramesh Kakarla4, Rene Rijnbrand5, Michael J Sofia6, John E Tavis7.
Abstract
We recently developed a screening system capable of identifying and evaluating inhibitors of the Hepatitis B virus (HBV) ribonuclease H (RNaseH), which is the only HBV enzyme not targeted by current anti-HBV therapies. Inhibiting the HBV RNaseH blocks synthesis of the positive-polarity DNA strand, causing early termination of negative-polarity DNA synthesis and accumulation of RNA:DNA heteroduplexes. We previously reported inhibition of HBV replication by N-hydroxyisoquinolinediones (HID) and N-hydroxypyridinediones (HPD) in human hepatoma cells. Here, we report results from our ongoing efforts to develop more potent anti-HBV RNaseH inhibitors in the HID/HPD compound classes. We synthesized and screened additional HIDs and HPDs for preferential suppression of positive-polarity DNA in cells replicating HBV. Three of seven new HIDs inhibited HBV replication, however, the therapeutic indexes (TI = CC50/EC50) did not improve over what we previously reported. All nine of the HPDs inhibited HBV replication with EC50s ranging from 110 nM to 4 μM. Cellular cytotoxicity was evaluated by four assays and CC50s ranged from 15 to >100 μM. The best compounds have a calculated TI of >300, which is a 16-fold improvement over the primary HPD hit. These studies indicate that the HPD compound class holds potential for antiviral discovery.Entities:
Keywords: Antiviral; HBV; N-hydroxyisoquinolinediones; N-hydroxypyridinediones; Ribonuclease H; Structure-activity relationship
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30768944 DOI: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2019.02.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antiviral Res ISSN: 0166-3542 Impact factor: 5.970