15 results on '"Akhter Molla"'
Search Results
2. High potency improvements to weak aryl uracil HCV polymerase inhibitor leads
- Author
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Gennadiy Koev, Rolf Wagner, Akhter Molla, Tami Pilot-Matias, Rubina Mondal, Peggy P. Huang, Dale J. Kempf, Clarence J. Maring, Kenton L. Longenecker, Donner Pamela L, Warren M. Kati, Ben Hock Lim, David W A Beno, Jill Beyer, Kennan C. Marsh, Yaya Liu, Lynn Colletti, and John T. Randolph
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Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Hepacivirus ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,Virus Replication ,Antiviral Agents ,Biochemistry ,Ns5b polymerase ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pharmacokinetics ,Drug Discovery ,Genotype ,Animals ,Potency ,Uracil ,Molecular Biology ,Polymerase ,biology ,Aryl ,Organic Chemistry ,virus diseases ,Small molecule ,Molecular biology ,digestive system diseases ,Rats ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Half-Life - Abstract
Described herein is the development of a potent non-nucleoside, small molecule inhibitor of genotype 1 HCV NS5B Polymerase. A 23 μM inhibitor that was active against HCV polymerase was further elaborated into a potent single-digit nanomolar inhibitor of HCV NS5B polymerase by additional manipulation of the R and R1 substituents. Subsequent modifications to improve physical properties were made in an attempt to achieve an acceptable pharmacokinetic profile.
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- 2013
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3. Microarray Compound Screening (μARCS) to Identify Inhibitors of HIV Integrase
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Caroline A. David, Tim Middleton, Debra Montgomery, Hock Ben Lim, Warren Kati, Akhter Molla, Xiaoling Xuei, Usha Warrior, James L. Kofron, and David J. Burns
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- 2002
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4. Discovery of ABT-267, a pan-genotypic inhibitor of HCV NS5A
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Laura A. Williams, Tami Pilot-Matias, G. Koev, Daniel D. Caspi, Preethi Krishnan, Christine Collins, Mark A. Matulenko, Warren M. Kati, Nelson Lissa T, Ryan G. Keddy, Michael D. Tufano, A. Chris Krueger, Yi Gao, David A. Degoey, Campbell Andrew L, John K. Pratt, Akhter Molla, Thomas Reisch, David W A Beno, Neeta Mistry, John T. Randolph, Sachin V. Patel, Charles W. Hutchins, Donner Pamela L, Motter Christopher E, Rolf Wagner, Dachun Liu, Clarence J. Maring, Rubina Mondal, and Emily O. Dumas
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Genotype ,Proline ,Biological Availability ,Hepacivirus ,Pharmacology ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,Antiviral Agents ,Pyrrolidine ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pharmacokinetics ,2-Naphthylamine ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Potency ,Animals ,Humans ,Anilides ,NS5A ,Uracil ,NS5B ,EC50 ,Sulfonamides ,virus diseases ,Valine ,Protease inhibitor (biology) ,Rats ,chemistry ,Molecular Medicine ,Ritonavir ,Carbamates ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We describe here N-phenylpyrrolidine-based inhibitors of HCV NS5A with excellent potency, metabolic stability, and pharmacokinetics. Compounds with 2S,5S stereochemistry at the pyrrolidine ring provided improved genotype 1 (GT1) potency compared to the 2R,5R analogues. Furthermore, the attachment of substituents at the 4-position of the central N-phenyl group resulted in compounds with improved potency. Substitution with tert-butyl, as in compound 38 (ABT-267), provided compounds with low-picomolar EC50 values and superior pharmacokinetics. It was discovered that compound 38 was a pan-genotypic HCV inhibitor, with an EC50 range of 1.7-19.3 pM against GT1a, -1b, -2a, -2b, -3a, -4a, and -5a and 366 pM against GT6a. Compound 38 decreased HCV RNA up to 3.10 log10 IU/mL during 3-day monotherapy in treatment-naive HCV GT1-infected subjects and is currently in phase 3 clinical trials in combination with an NS3 protease inhibitor with ritonavir (r) (ABT-450/r) and an NS5B non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor (ABT-333), with and without ribavirin.
- Published
- 2014
5. Synthesis and SAR of novel 1,1-dialkyl-2(1H)-naphthalenones as potent HCV polymerase inhibitors
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Sherie Masse, Daniel P. Larson, Debra Montgomery, Dale J. Kempf, Warren M. Kati, Todd W. Rockway, Akhter Molla, Yaya Liu, Todd D. Bosse, Hongmei Mo, Doug K. Hutchinson, Tim Middleton, Gennadiy Koev, Rolf Wagner, and Wen Jiang
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Genotype ,Stereochemistry ,Hepatitis C virus ,Hepacivirus ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Naphthalenes ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Chemical synthesis ,Virus ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Molecular Biology ,Polymerase ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Bicyclic molecule ,Organic Chemistry ,DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases ,biology.organism_classification ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Enzyme inhibitor ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine - Abstract
A series of gem -dialkyl naphthalenone derivatives with varied alkyl substitutions were synthesized and evaluated according to their structure–activity relationship. This investigation led to the discovery of potent inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus at low nanomolar concentrations in both enzymatic and cell-based HCV genotype 1a assays.
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- 2008
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6. Novel Azacyclic Ureas That Are Potent Inhibitors of HIV-1 Protease
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Chen Zhao, Dale J. Kempf, Hing L. Sham, David A. Betebenner, Thomas Herrin, William Rosenbrook, Kennan C. Marsh, Daniel W. Norbeck, Akhter Molla, Shuqun Lin, Ayda Saldivar, Jacob J. Plattner, Darold L. Madigan, Leping Li, Edith McDonald, Norman E. Wideburg, and Suthida Vasavanonda
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Male ,Stereochemistry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biophysics ,Biological Availability ,Biochemistry ,Cell Line ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,HIV Protease ,HIV-1 protease ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Urea ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Molecular Biology ,IC50 ,Cytopathic effect ,Protease ,biology ,HIV Protease Inhibitors ,Cell Biology ,Recombinant Proteins ,In vitro ,Rats ,HIV-1 ,biology.protein - Abstract
A series of novel, azacyclic ureas which are highly potent inhibitors of the HIV-1 protease (IC50 = 4.1 to0.5 nM) were synthesized. Aqueous solubilities of this series of compounds were improved by incorporating polar functional groups at the P1' P2 and P2' positions. These compounds also possess good anti-viral activity by inhibition of the cytopathic effect of HIV-13B in MT-4 cells in vitro.
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- 1996
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7. Synthesis and antiviral activities of the major metabolites of the HIV protease inhibitor ABT-378 (Lopinavir)
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Ayda Saldivar, Jacob J. Plattner, Gondi N. Kumar, Dale J. Kempf, Hing L. Sham, Akhter Molla, David A. Betebenner, Thomas Herrin, Daniel W. Norbeck, and Sudthida Vasavanonda
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Anti-HIV Agents ,Metabolite ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Pyrimidinones ,Biochemistry ,Lopinavir ,Virus ,Mixed Function Oxygenases ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A ,Humans ,HIV Protease Inhibitor ,Protease inhibitor (pharmacology) ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Organic Chemistry ,HIV ,virus diseases ,HIV Protease Inhibitors ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Enzyme inhibitor ,Lentivirus ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The HIV protease inhibitor ABT-378 (Lopinavir) is metabolized rapidly and extensively by CYP-3A4 catalyzed oxidation. Three of the major metabolites identified were synthesized and their antiviral (HIV) activities determined.
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- 2001
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8. ChemInform Abstract: A Novel, Picomolar Inhibitor of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease
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H. L. Sham, Kent D. Stewart, Kennan C. Marsh, Chang H. Park, Thomas Herrin, Xiang-Peng Kong, C. Zhao, Dale J. Kempf, David A. Betebenner, J. J. Plattner, Akhter Molla, T. Robins, D. W. Norbeck, Shuqun Lin, Ayda Saldivar, N. Lyons, Darold L. Madigan, W. Jun. Rosenbrook, Edith McDonald, Jon F. Denissen, Norman Wideburg, and Suthida Vasavanonda
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Protease ,Chemistry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virology - Published
- 2010
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9. Non-peptide entry inhibitors of HIV-1 that target the gp41 coiled coil pocket
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Steve Anderson, Akhter Molla, Robert J Carrick, Jeffrey R. Huth, Karl A. Walter, Leo W. Barrett, Robert P. Meadows, Kent D. Stewart, Dale J. Kempf, Paul L. Richardson, Clarence J. Maring, Vincent S. Stoll, Edmund D. Matayoshi, Teresa I. Ng, Edward T. Olejniczak, William E. Kohlbrenner, Renaldo Mendoza, Jean M. Severin, Hongmei Mo, Keith F. McDaniel, and Rebecca Hutchinson
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Models, Molecular ,Enfuvirtide ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Gp41 ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Viral envelope ,HIV Fusion Inhibitors ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Humans ,Benzamide ,Molecular Biology ,Coiled coil ,Cell fusion ,Organic Chemistry ,HIV Envelope Protein gp41 ,Peptide Fragments ,Ectodomain ,chemistry ,Benzamides ,Molecular Medicine ,Heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectroscopy ,medicine.drug ,Protein Binding - Abstract
The ectodomain of HIV-1 gp41 mediates the fusion of viral and host cellular membranes. The peptide-based drug Enfuvirtide 1 is precedent that antagonists of this fusion activity may act as anti HIV-agents. Here, NMR screening was used to discover non-peptide leads against this target and resulted in the discovery of a new benzamide 1 series. This series is non-peptide, low molecular weight, and analogs have activity in a cell fusion assay with EC50 values ranging 3–41 μM. Structural work on the gp41/benzamide 1 complex was determined by NMR spectroscopy using a designed model peptide system that mimics an open pocket of the fusogenic form of the protein.
- Published
- 2009
10. Des-A-ring benzothiadiazines: inhibitors of HCV genotype 1 NS5B RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
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Dale J. Kempf, Akhter Molla, Wen Jiang, Warren M. Kati, Clarence J. Maring, Yaya Liu, Debra Montgomery, Gennadiy Koev, Qinghua Xie, Sherie Masse, Donner Pamela L, and John K. Pratt
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Models, Molecular ,Genotype ,Stereochemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,RNA-dependent RNA polymerase ,Hepacivirus ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,Ring (chemistry) ,Benzothiadiazines ,Virus Replication ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Drug Discovery ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Molecular Biology ,NS5B ,Polymerase ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Molecular Structure ,Organic Chemistry ,RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase ,Small molecule ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Benzothiadiazine ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine - Abstract
In our program to discover non-nucleoside, small molecule inhibitors of genotype 1 HCV polymerase, we investigated a series of promising analogs based on a benzothiadiazine screening hit that contains an ABCD ring system. After demonstrating that a methylsulfonylamino D-ring substituent increased the enzyme potency into the low nanomolar range, we explored a minimum core required for activity by truncating to a three-ring system. Described herein are the syntheses and structure–activity relationship of a set of inhibitors lacking the A-ring of an ABCD ring system. We observed that small aromatic rings and alkenyl groups appended to the 5-position of the B-ring were optimal, resulting in inhibitors with low nanomolar potencies.
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- 2008
11. Design and characterization of an engineered gp41 protein from human immunodeficiency virus-1 as a tool for drug discovery
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Akhter Molla, Leo W. Barrett, Stephen F. Betz, Kevin Steffy, Kent D. Stewart, Jeffrey R. Huth, Paul L. Richardson, Jean M. Severin, Steve Muchmore, John E. Harlan, Dale J. Kempf, Kevin S. Harris, Edmund D. Matayoshi, Renaldo R. Mendoza, Vincent S. Stoll, Karl A. Walter, Kerry M. Swift, and Emily E. Gramling-Evans
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Binding Sites ,Base Sequence ,Drug discovery ,Protein Conformation ,Protein design ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Protein engineering ,Tripeptide ,Circular permutation in proteins ,Biology ,Gp41 ,Protein Engineering ,HIV Envelope Protein gp41 ,Computer Science Applications ,Ectodomain ,Biochemistry ,Drug Design ,Drug Discovery ,HIV-1 ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Binding site - Abstract
Two new proteins of approximately 70 amino acids in length, corresponding to an unnaturally-linked N- and C-helix of the ectodomain of the gp41 protein from the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1, were designed and characterized. A designed tripeptide links the C-terminus of the C-helix with the N-terminus of the N-helix in a circular permutation so that the C-helix precedes the N-helix in sequence. In addition to the artificial peptide linkage, the C-helix is truncated at its N-terminus to expose a region of the N-helix known as the “Trp-Trp-Ile” binding pocket. Sedimentation, crystallographic, and nuclear magnetic resonance studies confirmed that the protein had the desired trimeric structure with an unoccupied binding site. Spectroscopic and centrifugation studies demonstrated that the engineered protein had ligand binding characteristics similar to previously reported constructs. Unlike previous constructs which expose additional, shallow, non-conserved, and undesired binding pockets, only the single deep and conserved Trp-Trp-Ile pocket is exposed in the proteins of this study. This engineered version of gp41 protein will be potentially useful in research programs aimed at discovery of new drugs for therapy of HIV-infection in humans.
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- 2006
12. Microarray compound screening (microARCS) to identify inhibitors of HIV integrase
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Tim Middleton, Xiaoling Xuei, Warren M. Kati, Debra Montgomery, Akhter Molla, Hock Ben Lim, Caroline A. David, David J. Burns, Usha Warrior, and James L. Kofron
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0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Integrase inhibitor ,HIV Integrase ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Integrase ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Biotinylation ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Agarose ,Alkaline phosphatase ,HIV Integrase Inhibitors ,Antibody ,Fluorescein isothiocyanate ,DNA ,Biotechnology - Abstract
A novel high-throughput strand transfer assay has been developed, using Microarray Compound Screening (microARCS) technology, to identify inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) integrase. This technology utilizes agarose matrices to introduce a majority of the reagents throughout the assay. Integration of biotinylated donor DNA with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled target DNA occurs on a SAM membrane in the presence of integrase. An anti-FITC antibody conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (AP) was used to do an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with the SAM. An agarose gel containing AttoPhos, a substrate of AP, was used for detection of the integrase reactions on the SAM. For detection, the AttoPhos gel was separated from the SAM after incubation and then the gel was imaged using an Eagle Eye II closed-circuit device camera system. Potential integrase inhibitors appear as dark spots on the gel image. A library of approximately 250,000 compounds was screened using this HIV integrase strand transfer assay in microARCS format. Compounds from different structural classes were identified in this assay as novel integrase inhibitors.
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- 2002
13. Use of a fluorescence plate reader for measuring kinetic parameters with inner filter effect correction
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Akhter Molla, Rakesh Tripathi, Warren M. Kati, William E. Kohlbrenner, Yaya Liu, and Chih-Ming Chen
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Chemistry ,Serine Endopeptidases ,Biophysics ,Analytical chemistry ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Cell Biology ,Hepacivirus ,Kinetic inhibition ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,Kinetic energy ,Biochemistry ,Fluorescence ,Microtiter plate ,Kinetics ,Förster resonance energy transfer ,Filter effect ,Molecular Biology ,Plate reader ,Filtration ,RNA Helicases - Abstract
A general method is presented here for the determination of the K m , k cat , and k cat / K m of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) substrates using a fluorescence plate reader. A simple empirical method for correcting for the inner filter effect is shown to enable accurate and undistorted measurements of these very important kinetic parameters. Inner filter effect corrected rates of hydrolysis of a FRET peptide substrate by hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 protease at various substrate concentrations enabled measurement of a K m value of 4.4 ± 0.3 μM and k cat / K m value of 96,500 ± 5800 M −1 s −1 . These values are very close to the HPLC-determined K m value of 4.6 ± 0.7 μM and k cat / K m value of 92,600 ± 14,000 M −1 s −1 . We demonstrate that the inner filter effect correction of microtiter plate reader velocities enables rapid measurement of K i and K i ′ values and kinetic inhibition mechanisms for HCV NS3 protease inhibitors.
- Published
- 1999
14. A novel, picomolar inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease
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Terrel Robins, Norman E. Wideburg, William Rosenbrook, Ayda Saldivar, Suthida Vasavanonda, Hing L. Sham, Kennan C. Marsh, Kent D. Stewart, Chen Zhao, Jacob J. Plattner, Thomas Herrin, Jon F. Denissen, Nicholas Lyons, Dale J. Kempf, Xiang-P. Kong, David A. Betebenner, Darold L. Madigan, Akhter Molla, Shuqun Lin, Edith McDonald, Chang H. Park, and Daniel W. Norbeck
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Models, Molecular ,Protease ,Binding Sites ,biology ,Molecular model ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Drug Resistance, Microbial ,HIV Protease Inhibitors ,In vitro ,Virus ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,HIV Protease ,Enzyme inhibitor ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,biology.protein ,HIV-1 ,Molecular Medicine ,Gene - Abstract
The design, synthesis, and molecular modeling studies of a novel series of azacyclic ureas, which are inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease that incorporate different ligands for the S1', S2, and S2' substrate-binding sites of HIV-1 protease are described. The synthesis of this series is highly flexible in the sense that the P1', P2, and P2' residues of the inhibitors can be changed independently. Molecular modeling studies on the phenyl ring of the P2 and P2' ligand suggested incorporation of hydrogen-bonding donor/acceptor groups at the 3' and 4-positions of the phenyl ring should increase binding potency. This led to the discovery of compound 7f (A-98881), which possesses high potency in the HIV-1 protease inhibition assay and the in vitro MT-4 cell culture assay (Ki = approximately 5 pM and EC50 = 0.002 microM). This compares well with the symmetrical cyclic urea 1 pioneered at DuPont Merck.
- Published
- 1996
15. Corrigendum to 'Synthesis and antiviral activities of the major metabolites of the HIV protease inhibitor ABT-378 (Lopinavir)'
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Jacob J. Plattner, David A. Betebenner, Dale J. Kempf, Hing L. Sham, Sudthida Vasavanonda, Ayda Saldivar, Gondi N. Kumar, Akhter Molla, Thomas Herrin, and Daniel W. Norbeck
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Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Molecular Medicine ,HIV Protease Inhibitor ,Lopinavir ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Virology ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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