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Alizarine derivatives as new dual inhibitors of the HIV-1 reverse transcriptase-associated DNA polymerase and RNase H activities effective also on the RNase H activity of non-nucleoside resistant reverse transcriptases.

Authors :
Esposito, Francesca
Kharlamova, Tatyana
Distinto, Simona
Zinzula, Luca
Cheng, Yung-Chi
Dutschman, Ginger
Floris, Giovanni
Markt, Patrick
Corona, Angela
Tramontano, Enzo
Source :
FEBS Journal; May2011, Vol. 278 Issue 9, p1444-1457, 14p
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) has two associated activities, DNA polymerase and RNase H, both essential for viral replication and validated drug targets. Although all RT inhibitors approved for therapy target DNA polymerase activity, the search for new RT inhibitors that target the RNase H function and are possibly active on RTs resistant to the known non-nucleoside inhibitors (NNRTI) is a viable approach for anti-HIV drug development. In this study, several alizarine derivatives were synthesized and tested for both HIV-1 RT-associated activities. Alizarine analogues K-49 and KNA-53 showed IC values for both RT-associated functions of ∼ 10 μ. When tested on the K103N RT, both derivatives inhibited the RT-associated functions equally, whereas when tested on the Y181C RT, KNA-53 inhibited the RNase H function and was inactive on the polymerase function. Mechanism of action studies showed that these derivatives do not intercalate into DNA and do not chelate the divalent cofactor Mg. Kinetic studies demonstrated that they are noncompetitive inhibitors, they do not bind to the RNase H active site or to the classical NNRTI binding pocket, even though efavirenz binding negatively influenced K-49/KNA-53 binding and vice versa. This behavior suggested that the alizarine derivatives binding site might be close to the NNRTI binding pocket. Docking experiments and molecular dynamic simulation confirmed the experimental data and the ability of these compounds to occupy a binding pocket close to the NNRTI site. Newly synthesized alizarine analogues inhibited both HIV-1 wild-type reverse transcriptase (RT)-associated DNA polymerase and RNase H functions, and retained their inhibitory effect also on the RT-associated RNase H function of K103N and Y181C RTs. Mechanism of action studies, docking experiments and molecular dynamic simulation showed that they are allosteric inhibitors and occupy a binding pocket close to the NNRTI site. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1742464X
Volume :
278
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
FEBS Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
60093492
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1742-4658.2011.08057.x