Exploring the role of the α-carboxyphosphonate moiety in the HIV-RT activity of α-carboxy nucleoside phosphonates


Autoria(s): Mullins, Nicholas D.; Maguire, Nuala M.; Ford, Alan; Das, Kalyan; Arnold, Eddy; Balzarinic, Jan; Maguire, Anita R.
Data(s)

08/11/2016

08/11/2016

19/01/2016

Resumo

As α-carboxy nucleoside phosphonates (α-CNPs) have demonstrated a novel mode of action of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase inhibition, structurally related derivatives were synthesized, namely the malonate 2, the unsaturated and saturated bisphosphonates 3 and 4, respectively and the amide 5. These compounds were evaluated for inhibition of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase in cell-free assays. The importance of the α-carboxy phosphonoacetic acid moiety for achieving reverse transcriptase inhibition, without the need for prior phosphorylation, was confirmed. The malonate derivative 2 was less active by two orders of magnitude than the original α-CNPs, while displaying the same pattern of kinetic behavior; interestingly the activity resides in the “L”-enantiomer of 2, as seen with the earlier series of α-CNPs. A crystal structure with an RT/DNA complex at 2.95 Å resolution revealed the binding of the “L”-enantiomer of 2, at the polymerase active site with a weaker metal ion chelation environment compared to 1a (T-α-CNP) which may explain the lower inhibitory activity of 2.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

MULLINS, N. D., MAGUIRE, N. M., FORD, A., DAS, K., ARNOLD, E., BALZARINI, J. and MAGUIRE, A. R. (2016) ‘Exploring the role of the α-carboxyphosphonate moiety in the HIV-RT activity of α-carboxy nucleoside phosphonates’, Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry, 14, 2454-2465. doi:10.1039/C5OB02507A

14

2454

2465

1477-0520

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/3254

10.1039/C5OB02507A

Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Royal Society of Chemistry

Direitos

© 2016, Royal Society of Chemistry.

Palavras-Chave #HIV-1 reverse transcriptase #Inhibitory activity #Kinetic behavior #Metal-ion chelation #Orders of magnitude #Polymerase active site #Reverse transcriptases
Tipo

Article (peer-reviewed)