Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a global health concern; recent estimates suggest that 2.2 to 3% of the world's population, equivalent to 130 to 170 million individuals, are chronically infected with the virus (13, 31). These patients are at risk of developing debilitating liver diseases such as cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (1). Furthermore, current models suggest that the burden of HCV-associated disease is set to rise for the next 20 years (6). There is no HCV vaccine; the current standard of care (SOC) involves lengthy treatments with ribavirin and injected pegylated interferon, which exhibit variable efficacies and are associated with severe, and sometimes lifethreatening, side effects. Encouragingly, many direct-acting antiviral (DAA) molecules are in clinical development, and the most advanced (telaprevir and boceprevir) will probably be used to treat HCV-infected patients in 2011 (19,29,42,43,61). However, caution should be employed against overoptimism; attrition rates are high during drug development, and the first drugs will be given in combination with, not instead of, the current SOC. Therefore, the continued development of additional treatments is needed, especially since it is widely acknowledged that to limit the emergence of drug-resistant viral variants, effective therapeutic strategies for HCV will consist of multiple DAAs (50).A multitude of screening campaigns has revealed many diverse and interesting chemical compounds capable of specifically inhibiting HCV RNA replication. Many of these compounds target the HCV-encoded nonstructural (NS) proteins (NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B), which are required for HCV genome synthesis (3, 37). To instigate HCV genome replication, the NS proteins interact with viral genomes and certain host-encoded factors to form multiprotein assemblies termed "replication complexes" (RCs), which are sites of viral RNA synthesis derived from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (8,14,45,53). In HCV-infected cells, RCs are juxtaposed to intracellular lipid storage organelles termed lipid droplets (LDs), which are coated with the HCV capsid protein (core) and probably serve as platforms to accept replicated genomes from RCs to initiate virion assembly (26,44,53). Of considerable interest are inhibitors that target the HCV-encoded NS5A protein. These inhibitors were originally discovered from the screening of cells containing HCV subgenomic replicons against libraries of small molecules and were identified as NS5A inhibitors by utilizing a strategy termed "chemical genetics" (12, 32). NS5A-targeting inhibitors are notable for their unprecedented potency in cell-based HCV replication assays: 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC 50 s) in the low-picomolar