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Structural Determinants for Affinity Enhancement of a Dual Antagonist Peptide Entry Inhibitor of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type-1

Authors :
Vanessa Pirrone
Shendra R. Miller
Simon Cocklin
Sabine Baxter
Ferit Tuzer
Irwin Chaiken
Judith M. LaLonde
M. Umashankara
Jeffrey C. Klein
Navneet Jawanda
Fred C. Krebs
Arne Schön
Amos B. Smith
Joseph Sodroski
Ernesto Freire
Navid Madani
Hosahudya N. Gopi
Isaac Zentner
Source :
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 51:2638-2647
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2008.

Abstract

Structure-activity correlations were investigated for substituted peptide conjugates that function as dual receptor site antagonists of HIV-1 gp120. A series of peptide conjugates were constructed via click reaction of both aryl and alkyl acetylenes with an internally incorporated azidoproline 6 derived from the parent peptide 1 (12p1, RINNIPWSEAMM). Compared to 1, many of these conjugates were found to exhibit several orders of magnitude increase in both affinity for HIV-1 gp120 and inhibition potencies at both the CD4 and coreceptor binding sites of gp120. We sought to determine structural factors in the added triazole grouping responsible for the increased binding affinity and antiviral activity of the dual inhibitor conjugates. We measured peptide conjugate potencies in both kinetic and cell infection assays. High affinity was sterically specific, being exhibited by the cis- but not the trans-triazole. The results demonstrate that aromatic, hydrophobic, and steric features in the residue 6 side-chain are important for increased affinity and inhibition. Optimizing these features provides a basis for developing gp120 dual inhibitors into peptidomimetic and increasingly smaller molecular weight entry antagonist leads.

Details

ISSN :
15204804 and 00222623
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f3bd9ceed55edf3bccdc7ccc21887b3