Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10587802 | Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
7-Deazapurines are known to possess broad antiviral activity, however the 2â²-C-methylguanosine analogue displays poor cell permeation and limited phosphorylation, thus is not an efficient inhibitor of hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication. We previously reported the 6-O-methyl entity as a prodrug moiety to increase liphophilicity of guanine nucleosides and the ProTide approach applied to 2â²-C-methyl-6-O-methylguanosine has lead to potent HCV inhibitors now in clinical trials. In this Letter, we report the synthesis and biological evaluation of 2â²-C-methyl-6-O-methyl-7-deaza guanosine and ProTide derivatives. In contrast to prior studies, removal of the N-7 of the nucleobase entirely negates anti-HCV activity compared to the 2â²-C-methyl-6-O-methylguanosine analogues. To understand better this significant loss of activity, enzymatic assays and molecular modeling were carried out and suggested 2â²-C-methyl-6-O-methyl-7-deaza guanosine and related ProTides do not act as efficient prodrugs of the free nucleotide, in marked contrast to the case of the parent guanine analogue.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Authors
Claire Bourdin, Christopher McGuigan, Andrea Brancale, Stanley Chamberlain, John Vernachio, Jeff Hutchins, Elena Gorovits, Alexander Kolykhalov, Jerry Muhammad, Joseph Patti, Geoffrey Henson, Blair Bleiman, K. Dawn Bryant, Babita Ganguly, Damound Hunley,