1. New anti-viral drugs for the treatment of the common cold.
- Author
-
Maugeri C, Alisi MA, Apicella C, Cellai L, Dragone P, Fioravanzo E, Florio S, Furlotti G, Mangano G, Ombrato R, Luisi R, Pompei R, Rincicotti V, Russo V, Vitiello M, and Cazzolla N
- Subjects
- 3C Viral Proteases, Humans, Inhibitory Concentration 50, Structure-Activity Relationship, Viral Proteins antagonists & inhibitors, Antiviral Agents chemistry, Benzamides chemistry, Benzamides pharmacology, Common Cold drug therapy, Cysteine Endopeptidases drug effects, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors chemistry, Rhinovirus enzymology, Viral Proteins drug effects
- Abstract
Human Rhinovirus (HRV) is the most important aetiologic agent of common cold in adults and children. HRV is a single-stranded, positive sense RNA virus and, despite the high level of conservation among different serotypes, sequence alignment of viral protease 3C with mammalian protease reveals no homology. Thus, protease 3C is an optimal target for the development of anti-HRV agents. In the present work we investigated the design, the synthesis and the development of new potential reversible inhibitors against HRV protease 3C. Docking studies on the crystallized structure of HRV2 protease 3C led us to the design and the synthesis of a series of 3,5 disubstituted benzamides able to act as analogues of the substrate. We also developed 1,3,5 trisubstituted benzamides where aromatic substitutions on the aryl ring led us to investigate the importance of pi-pi interaction on the stabilization of protease 3C-inhibitor complex. All structures were tested for enzymatic inhibition on HRV14 protease 3C. Results highlighted the inhibitory activity of compounds 13, 14, and 20 (91%, 81%, and 85% at 10 microM, respectively), with the latter exhibiting an ID(50) (dose that inhibits 50% of the viral cytopathic effect) on HRV-14=25 microg/ml.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF