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N‑substituted quinolinonyl diketo acid derivatives as HIV integrase strand transfer inhibitors and their activity against RNase H function of reverse transcriptase

Authors :
Takashi Masoaka
Antonella Messore
Giuliana Cuzzucoli Crucitti
Valentina Noemi Madia
Ettore Novellino
Sandro Cosconati
Francesco Saverio Di Leva
Silvano Tortorella
Luca Pescatori
Christophe Marchand
Suhman Chung
Stuart F.J. Le Grice
Yves Pommier
Luciana Marinelli
Giovanni Pupo
Francesco Saccoliti
Mathieu Métifiot
Luigi Scipione
Roberto Di Santo
Roberta Costi
Pescatori, L
Métifiot, M
Chung, S
Masoaka, T
Cuzzucoli Crucitti, G
Messore, A
Pupo, G
Madia, Vn
Saccoliti, F
Scipione, L
Tortorella, S
Di Leva, F
Cosconati, Sandro
Marinelli, L
Novellino, E
Le Grice, Sf
Pommier, Y
Marchand, C
Costi, R
Di Santo, R.
Pescatori, Luca
Métifiot, Mathieu
Chung, Suhman
Masoaka, Takashi
Cuzzucoli Crucitti, Giuliana
Messore, Antonella
Pupo, Giovanni
Madia, Valentina Noemi
Saccoliti, Francesco
Scipione, Luigi
Tortorella, Silvano
Di Leva, Francesco Saverio
Marinelli, Luciana
Novellino, Ettore
Le Grice, Stuart F. J.
Pommier, Yve
Marchand, Christophe
Costi, Roberta
Di Santo, Roberto
Source :
J Med Chem
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Chemical Society, 2015.

Abstract

Bifunctional quinolinonyl DKA derivatives were first described as nonselective inhibitors of 3′-processing (3′-P) and strand transfer (ST) functions of HIV-1 integrase (IN), while 7-aminosubstituted quinolinonyl derivatives were proven IN strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) that also displayed activity against ribonuclease H (RNase H). In this study, we describe the design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of new quinolinonyl diketo acid (DKA) derivatives characterized by variously substituted alkylating groups on the nitrogen atom of the quinolinone ring. Removal of the second DKA branch of bifunctional DKAs, and the amino group in position 7 of quinolinone ring combined with a fine-tuning of the substituents on the benzyl group in position 1 of the quinolinone, increased selectivity for IN ST activity. In vitro, the most potent compound was 11j (IC50 = 10 nM), while the most active compounds against HIV infected cells were ester derivatives 10j and 10l. In general, the activity against RNase H was negligible, with only a few compounds active at concentrations higher than 10 μM. The binding mode of the most potent IN inhibitor 11j within the IN catalytic core domain (CCD) is described as well as its binding mode within the RNase H catalytic site to rationalize its selectivity. (Chemical Presented).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Med Chem
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....52be5986e09eb32fad603aa96924a15c