| Literature DB >> 31501601 |
Stephen R Yant1, Andrew Mulato2, Derek Hansen2, Winston C Tse2,3, Anita Niedziela-Majka2, Jennifer R Zhang2, George J Stepan2, Debi Jin2, Melanie H Wong2, Jill M Perreira4, Eric Singer2, Giuseppe A Papalia2, Eric Y Hu2, Jim Zheng2, Bing Lu2, Scott D Schroeder2, Kevin Chou2, Shekeba Ahmadyar2, Albert Liclican2, Helen Yu2, Nikolai Novikov2, Eric Paoli2, Daniel Gonik2, Renee R Ram2, Magdeleine Hung2, William M McDougall4, Abraham L Brass4,5,6, Wesley I Sundquist7, Tomas Cihlar2, John O Link2.
Abstract
People living with HIV (PLWH) have expressed concern about the life-long burden and stigma associated with taking pills daily and can experience medication fatigue that might lead to suboptimal treatment adherence and the emergence of drug-resistant viral variants, thereby limiting future treatment options1-3. As such, there is strong interest in long-acting antiretroviral (ARV) agents that can be administered less frequently4. Herein, we report GS-CA1, a new archetypal small-molecule HIV capsid inhibitor with exceptional potency against HIV-2 and all major HIV-1 types, including viral variants resistant to the ARVs currently in clinical use. Mechanism-of-action studies indicate that GS-CA1 binds directly to the HIV-1 capsid and interferes with capsid-mediated nuclear import of viral DNA, HIV particle production and ordered capsid assembly. GS-CA1 selects in vitro for unfit GS-CA1-resistant capsid variants that remain fully susceptible to other classes of ARVs. Its high metabolic stability and low solubility enabled sustained drug release in mice following a single subcutaneous dosing. GS-CA1 showed high antiviral efficacy as a long-acting injectable monotherapy in a humanized mouse model of HIV-1 infection, outperforming long-acting rilpivirine. Collectively, these results demonstrate the potential of ultrapotent capsid inhibitors as new long-acting agents for the treatment of HIV-1 infection.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31501601 PMCID: PMC7396128 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-019-0560-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440