Antiviral Agents: Viruses Are Obligate Cellular Parasites Composed of Nucleic Acid
Antiviral Agents: Viruses Are Obligate Cellular Parasites Composed of Nucleic Acid
Antiviral Agents: Viruses Are Obligate Cellular Parasites Composed of Nucleic Acid
Viral protein
RNA polymerase
Inhibition of RT
would
prevent conversion of
viral RNA genome
into
DNA for
incorporation
HIV protease is required
into the hosts
to process the transcribed
and translated proteins for replicatory
the new virions system
Vaccination
Is the preferred method of protection against viral
diseases.
Extremely successful against childhood diseases such
as polio, measles, mumps, smallpox and yellow fever.
Works by:
introducing the body to foreign material having
molecular similarity to some component of the virus.
Introducing killed or weakened version of the virus.
Or administer fragments of virus having the
characteristics antigen.
Virus is a hard target
Most of the time the virus spend in the host will be
inside the host cell.
This effectively protect the viral cell from the host
immune system as well as from available circulating
enzymes.
Another problem appears in treating viral infections is
the fact that there are limited number of potential
drug targets since viruses use the host biochemical
mechanisms to multiply.
Antiviral agents
The first effective antiviral agents appear in 1960s and
only three were clinically available:
Idoxuridine and vidarabine for herpes infections.
Amantadine for influenza A infections.
Growing interest in finding effective antiviral agents
after that was due to:
The need to tackle AIDS spread.
The increased understanding of viral genomic sequence
and infectious mechanisms.
Amantadine and Rimantadine
Amantadine and Rimantadine are both drugs that
interfere with penetration of host cells by viruses and
block early stage replication.
Amantadine has been used for years as a treatment for
Parkinson disease
The two differ in pharmacokinetics; Both are well
absorbed and distributed. Amantidine is excreted in
the urine nearly unchanged while Rimantidine is
extensively metabolized.
NEURAMINIDASE INHIBITORS:
ZANAMIVIR AND OSELTAMIVIR
Sheathing the protein coat of the influenza virus is a lipid envelope. Two
macromolecules, surface glycoproteins, are embedded in the lipid envelope:
hemagglutinin and neuraminidase.
These glycoproteins fulfill separate functions in the viral cycle.
Hemagglutinin is important for binding of the virus to the host cell
membrane by a terminal sialic acid residue.
Neuraminidase is an enzyme. It functions in several of the early activation
steps of the virus and occurs in both influenza A and B viruses. Neuraminidase
is believed to be a sialidase, cleaving a bond between a terminal sialic acid unit
and a sugar. This action is important in enhancing the penetration of viruses
into host cells, and hence enhances the infectivity of the virus.
If the sialic acidsugar bond is prevented from being cleaved, the viruses tend
to aggregate and the migration of viruses into host cells is inhibited. Hence,
drugs that inhibit neuraminidase should be useful in interfering with infection
caused by influenza virus type A and B.
Zanamivir
Zanamivir has been shown to form a salt bridge with the
guanidine and Glu-119 and a charge transfer interaction
with Glu-227.
These interactions increase the interaction strength with
the enzyme and create an excellent competitive inhibitor
and an effective antiviral agent for influenza types A and B.
zanamivir is effective when administered before or after
exposure to the influenza virus. If administered before
exposure to the virus, the drug reduced viral propagation,
infectivity, and disease symptoms.
Oseltamivir Phosphate
An important feature of oseltamivir is the ethyl ester,
which makes the drug orally efficacious. This drug is
the first orally active agent for use against influenza A
and B. It is also indicated for the treatment of acute
illness. If administered within 2 days after the onset of
influenza symptoms, the drug is effective.
Oseltamivir is actually a prodrug in its ethyl ester
form. Ester hydrolysis releases the active oseltamivir
molecule.
INTERFERONS: INTERFERON ALFA (INTRON
A, ROFERON A) AND INTERFERON BETA
(BETASERON)
The interferons are a family of small proteins or glycoproteins
of molecular masses ranging from 15,000 to 25,000
Da and 145 to 166 amino acids long. Eukaryotic cells secrete
interferons in response to viral infection. Their mechanism
of action is bimodal. The immediate effect is the recruitment
of natural killer (NK) cells to kill the host cell
harboring the virus (Fig. 4.13). Interferons then induce a
state of viral resistance in cells in the immediate vicinity,
preventing spread of the virus. Additionally, interferons induce
a cascade of antiviral proteins from the target cellIFNs are extremely potent cytokines that possess antiviral,
immunomodulating, and antiproliferative actions. IFNs
are synthesized by infected cells in response to various inducers and, in turn, elicit either an antiviral state in
neighboring cells or a natural killer cell response that destroys the initially infected cell (Fig. 9.3).
There are three classes of human IFNs that possess significant antiviral activity.
These are IFN- (more than 20 subtypes), IFN- (2
subtypes), and IFN-. IFN- is used clinically in a recombinant
form (called interferon alfa). IFN- (Betaseron) is a
recombinant form marketed for the treatment of multiple
sclerosis.
Antiviral agents for DNA viruses
Mainly against herpes viruses such as cold sore, genital
herpes, chicken pox, eye diseases.
Trifluridine
Idoxuridine
Inhibition of RT
would
prevent conversion of
viral RNA genome
into
DNA for
incorporation
HIV protease is required
into the hosts
to process the transcribed
and translated proteins for replicatory
the new virions system
Antiviral agents against HIV
Until 1987, no anti-HIV drug was available.
Extensive studies carried out on the life cycle of HIV
have led to identifying possible drug targets within the
viral cell:
Reverse transcriptase.
Protease.
Unfortunately, HIV undergoes mutation extremely
easily, which results in rapid development of
resistance.
For that, current therapy depends on the use of
combination of reverse transcriptase inhibitors and
protease inhibitors.
The ideal anti-HIV agent
Must have high affinity for its target.
Activity range in picomolar.
Be effective in preventing the virus multiplying and
spreading.
Show low activity against host enzymes.
Safe and well tolerated.
Has a broad antiviral activity.
It must be inexpensive since it will be used for the life
time of the patient.
Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase
Inhibitors (NRTIs)
This enzyme is unique to the virus so it is an ideal
target.
However, it still a DNA polymerase like, so there is a
possibility that its inhibitor might affect the cellular
DNA polymerase.
Nucleoside-like drugs have been proved as useful anti-
viral agents:
Nitrogen base + Deoxyribose sugar.
Should be phosphorylated three times (by cellular
kinases) to form the active nucleotide triphosphate.
Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (NRTIs)
O O
NH NH
N O N O
HO HO
O O
H H
H H
H H
H H N3 H
OH H
Non-nucleophilic
Deoxythymidine Azido group Zidovidine (AZT)
GROWING GROWING
CHAIN OF NEW CHAIN OF NEW
STRAND STRAND
GUANINE GUANINE
O O
O O
O P O P O
O REVERSE O
TRANSCRIPTASE
O H H O H H
NH
H H H
OH H O H
O
P N O
O O
O
NH O
H H
N O H
O N3 H
O
O O P
O O
P O H H
P
O O H
O N3 H
O
NON-NUCLEOPHILIC
RT uses zidovidine triphosphate FUNCTIONAL GROUP
in place of thymidine triphosphate
as complementary base to Adenine
In template strand
3' 5'
-
O
O -
O
P O O-
O O P O
O O P
O O
O
O
O O
O
O
A G
C
A
T
C
G
O T
O
O
O
O
O O
P O
OH
O N3
O- O
P O
No further
-
O
O
nucleic acid
extension
- P O
O
O
P O
-
O
O-
5'
3'
Other NRTIs
Non-nucleoside reverse
transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs).
They are hydrophobic molecules bind to the allosteric
binding site which is hydrophobic in nature (non-
competitive reversible inhibitors).
Rapid resistance emerges due to mutation in the
NNRTI binding site.
Induces turn
in the backbone
Mechanism of hydrolysis by
protease enzyme
Targeting HIV protease
HIV protease is a much smaller enzyme than the
equivalent host aspartate proteases.
Cleaves substrates at the N-terminal to proline
residues unlike mammalian proteases.
Peptides from infected cells suggested that Tyr-Pro
sites were the likely cleavage sites.
Rationale for inhibitor design was based on Phe-
Pro or Tyr-Pro motif.
HIV Protease Inhibitors (PIs)
Are not prodrugs and do not need to be activated.
So can be tested in-vitro to test activity (IC50.the
concentration of drug required to inhibit the enzyme by
50%) especially after knowing that viral protease can
easily isolated.
Low IC50 does not mean a good antiviral activity
(Why?).
Most of them are derived from peptide lead compounds.
HIV Protease Inhibitors (PIs)
They are oligopeptides in general:
HN Asn
NH O NH2
Pro
O
HN O O
H
NH N N
O
O
O
O
Tyr
OH
Possible structural modification on
the lead PI
The size of the compound: di, tri, tetra, or
pentapeptide.
Better water
Solubility and
availabiliy