Structure-Based Bioisosterism Yields HIV-1 NNRTIs with Improved Drug-Resistance Profiles and Favorable Pharmacokinetic Properties
Article 2020 en
Authors
DK
Dongwei Kang
DF
Da Feng
YS
Yanying Sun
Abstract
1 min read
The development of efficacious NNRTIs for AIDS therapy commonly encountered the rapid generation of drug-resistant mutations, which becomes a major impediment to effective anti-HIV treatment. Using a structure-based bioisosterism strategy, a series of piperidine-substituted thiophene[2,3-<i>d</i>]pyrimidine derivatives were designed and synthesized. Compound <b>9a</b> yielded the greatest potency, exhibiting significantly better anti-HIV-1 activity than <b>ETR</b> against all of the tested NNRTI-resistant HIV-1 strains. In addition, the phenotypic (cross)resistance of <b>9a</b> and other NRTIs to the different selected HIV-1 strains was evaluated. As expected, no phenotypic cross-resistance against the NRTIs (AZT and PMPA) was observed with the mutant <b>9a</b><sup>res</sup> strain. Furthermore, <b>9a</b> was identified with improved solubility, lower CYP liability, and hERG inhibition. Remarkably, <b>9a</b> exhibited optimal pharmacokinetic properties in rats (<i>F</i> = 37.06%) and safety in mice (LD<sub>50</sub> > 2000 mg/kg), which highlights <b>9a</b> as a promising anti-HIV-1 drug candidate.
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