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Clinical targeting of HIV capsid protein with a long-acting small molecule

Authors :
Qi Liu
Chien-Hung Chou
Eda Canales
Roman Sakowicz
Steven Bondy
Tomas Cihlar
Albert Liclican
Diana M. Brainard
Anita Niedziela-Majka
William Rowe
Nikolai Novikov
Shekeba Ahmadyar
John R. Somoza
Randall L. Halcomb
Cheryl K. McDonald
Carina E. Cannizzaro
Nicolas Margot
Debi Jin
George Stepan
Qiaoyin Wu
Eric Hu
Judy Mwangi
Stephanie A. Leavitt
Todd C. Appleby
Robert L. Anderson
Scott E. Lazerwith
Schroeder Scott D
Tse Winston C
Gediminas Brizgys
Rebecca Begley
Yili Xu
Scott Sellers
Scott A. Wolckenhauer
Wesley I. Sundquist
Derek Hansen
Philip Morganelli
Andrew Mulato
Sheila Clancy
Xiaohong Liu
Anna Chiu
Eric S. Daar
Renee R. Ram
S. Swaminathan
Anne E. Chester
Melanie H. Wong
Ya-Pei Liu
John O. Link
Michael Graupe
Luong K. Tsai
Christian Callebaut
Latesh Lad
William E. Lee
Rujuta A. Bam
Terrence Z. Cai
Bing Lu
John K. Ling
Roland D. Saito
Magdeleine Hung
Armando G. Villaseñor
Peter Ruane
Nikos Pagratis
Martin S. Rhee
David Koditek
Gordon Crofoot
Giuseppe A. Papalia
Stephen R. Yant
Rob Hyland
Helen Yu
Jim Zheng
Jennifer R. Zhang
Gary I. Sinclair
Jiayao Li
Eric Singer
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Oral antiretroviral agents provide life-saving treatments for millions of people living with HIV, and can prevent new infections via pre-exposure prophylaxis1–5. However, some people living with HIV who are heavily treatment-experienced have limited or no treatment options, owing to multidrug resistance6. In addition, suboptimal adherence to oral daily regimens can negatively affect the outcome of treatment—which contributes to virologic failure, resistance generation and viral transmission—as well as of pre-exposure prophylaxis, leading to new infections1,2,4,7–9. Long-acting agents from new antiretroviral classes can provide much-needed treatment options for people living with HIV who are heavily treatment-experienced, and additionally can improve adherence10. Here we describe GS-6207, a small molecule that disrupts the functions of HIV capsid protein and is amenable to long-acting therapy owing to its high potency, low in vivo systemic clearance and slow release kinetics from the subcutaneous injection site. Drawing on X-ray crystallographic information, we designed GS-6207 to bind tightly at a conserved interface between capsid protein monomers, where it interferes with capsid-protein-mediated interactions between proteins that are essential for multiple phases of the viral replication cycle. GS-6207 exhibits antiviral activity at picomolar concentrations against all subtypes of HIV-1 that we tested, and shows high synergy and no cross-resistance with approved antiretroviral drugs. In phase-1 clinical studies, monotherapy with a single subcutaneous dose of GS-6207 (450 mg) resulted in a mean log10-transformed reduction of plasma viral load of 2.2 after 9 days, and showed sustained plasma exposure at antivirally active concentrations for more than 6 months. These results provide clinical validation for therapies that target the functions of HIV capsid protein, and demonstrate the potential of GS-6207 as a long-acting agent to treat or prevent infection with HIV. The small molecule GS-6207, which disrupts the function of the HIV capsid protein, shows potential as a long-acting therapeutic agent for the treatment and prevention of HIV infection.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
584
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5892a90808b40581a09439f9529aaaa6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2443-1