The HIV-1 CA protein has gained remarkable
attention as a promising
therapeutic target for the development of new antivirals, due to its
pivotal roles in HIV-1 replication (structural and regulatory). Herein,
we report the design and synthesis of three series of benzenesulfonamide-containing
phenylalanine derivatives obtained by further structural modifications
of PF-74 to aid in the discovery of more potent and drug-like
HIV-1 CA inhibitors. Structure–activity relationship studies
of these compounds led to the identification of new phenylalanine
derivatives with a piperazinone moiety, represented by compound 11l, which exhibited anti-HIV-1NL4–3 activity
5.78-fold better than PF-74. Interestingly, 11l also showed anti-HIV-2ROD activity (EC50 =
31 nM), with almost 120 times increased potency over PF-74. However, due to the higher significance of HIV-1 as compared to
HIV-2 for the human population, this manuscript focuses on the mechanism
of action of our compounds in the context of HIV-1. SPR studies on
representative compounds confirmed CA as the binding target. The action
stage determination assay demonstrated that these inhibitors exhibited
antiviral activities with a dual-stage inhibition profile. The early-stage
inhibitory activity of compound 11l was 6.25 times more
potent as compared to PF-74 but appeared to work via
the accelerating capsid core assembly rather than stabilization. However,
the mechanism by which they exert their antiviral activity in the
late stage appears to be the same as PF-74 with less
infectious HIV-1 virions produced in their presence, as judged p24
content studies. MD simulations provided the key rationale for the
promising antiviral potency of 11l. Additionally, 11l exhibited a modest increase in HLM and human plasma metabolic
stabilities as compared to PF-74, as well as a moderately
improved pharmacokinetic profile, favorable oral bioavailability,
and no acute toxicity. These studies provide insights and serve as
a starting point for subsequent medicinal chemistry efforts in optimizing
these promising HIV inhibitors.
Novel therapies are urgently needed to improve global treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Herein, we briefly provide a concise report on the medicinal chemistry strategies towards the development of effective SARS-CoV-2 inhibitors with representative examples in different strategies from the medicinal chemistry perspective.
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