textjournal article
Virtual Screening, Identification, and Biochemical Characterization of Novel Inhibitors of the Reverse Transcriptase of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type-1
Abstract
The reverse transcriptase (RT) of human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) is a leading target in current antiretroviral therapy. Unfortunately, drug-resistant RT mutants evolve under the pressure of these drugs, and therefore, new anti-RT inhibitors are constantly required for HIV-1/AIDS treatment. We virtually screened a large chemical library of compounds against two crystal structures of HIV-1 RT to identify novel inhibitors. Top-scoring compounds were tested experimentally; 71 inhibited the RT-associated DNA polymerase, while several also inhibited HIV-1 pseudovirus infection in a cell-based assay. A combination of substituents from two structurally related inhibitors in a single molecule improved the inhibition efficacy. This compound strongly suppressed the RT-associated activity also protecting human lymphocytes from HIV-1 infection. RT inhibition by this compound was reversible and noncompetitive. This molecule and another structurally unrelated potent compound inhibited a known drug-resistant mutant of HIV-1 RT and affected moderately the HIV-2 RT-associated DNA polymerase. These inhibitors may serve as promising anti-HIV lead compounds- Text
- Journal contribution
- Biophysics
- Biochemistry
- Medicine
- Molecular Biology
- Neuroscience
- Pharmacology
- Cancer
- Hematology
- Infectious Diseases
- Virology
- Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Chemical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- chemical library
- Biochemical Characterization
- Virtual Screening
- immunodeficiency virus type
- pseudovirus infection
- antiretroviral therapy
- Novel Inhibitors
- DNA
- crystal structures
- RT inhibition
- inhibition efficacy
- compound
- HIV
- novel inhibitors