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Antiviral Agents . Introduction. Because viruses are obligate intracellular parasites, identification of safe and effective antiviral therapies is difficult. The best antiviral drugs inhibit a specific step in viral replication or pathogenesis.
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Introduction • Because viruses are obligate intracellular parasites, identification of safe and effective antiviral therapies is difficult. • The best antiviral drugs inhibit a specific step in viral replication or pathogenesis. • Drug discovery can be accomplished by screening or rational design. • The emergence of virus mutants resistant to antiviral drugs is a serious problem. • Combination of targeted delivery strategies to control toxicities and resistance.
Drug Discovery/Development Pipeline Today's Focus • Multifaceted, complicated, lengthy process Clinical Pharmacology & Safety Pre-clinical Pharmacology Pre-clinical Safety Products Discovery Exploratory Development Full Development Phase I Phase II Phase III 0 15 5 10 12 -15 Years Drug Idea
Drug Development • Viruses are now becoming better understood and several viral genomes have been properly mapped. • Scientists are now looking for the best drug targets • The main point of interest is any viral protein that the host organism does not normally produce • Once these viral proteins are identified they are tested using a large scale screening process to test for effectiveness
Drug Development • Antiviral candidates are tested in mass quantities • Antiviral drugs generally have strange side effects and a high toxicity • As with any pathogenic agent, Viruses evolve and develop resistance. • Thus the need for new drugs always exists
Drug Development There are several known methods that the makers of Antiviral drugs are looking at, including: • Prevention of Viral Entry • Targeting the RNA/DNA replication in the cell • Targeting the transcriptase factors for Viral DNA • Destroying Viral proteases so that viral proteins are not cut and rearranged in optimal order • Stopping the release of the mature viruses from the host cell
The development of antiviral agents lagged significantly behind the development of antibacterial drugs. • Early drugs were highly toxic. • Analysis of the steps of viral replication has identified potential targets for antiviral drugs (e.g. structures, enzymes or processes). • Inhibitors of Attachment include anti-receptor antibody, natural ligands and synthetic ligands.
Inhibitors of Penetration and uncoating • Amantadine and Rimantadine:- • They are hydrophobic amines (weak organic bases) with clinical efficacy against influenza A only. • They concentrate in and buffer the contents of the endosomal vesicles preventing uncoating. • Their specificity stems from their ability to bind to and block the proton channel formed by the M2 matrix protein.
Influenza Treatment with Ion Channel Blockers Amantadine & Rimantadine • Prevent seasonal influenza A in 70-80% of cases • Can reduce severity & duration of illness if started within 48 hrs of onset of symptoms. • Treated persons may shed resistant virus after 5-7 days of treatment (sometimes as early as 2-3 days). All pandemic H1N1 strains are resistant. • Treatment should be discontinued after 3-5 days of treatment or within 24-48 hrs after disappearance of signs/symptoms).
Pleconaril • It is a broad spectrum antipicorna virus agent. • It is a small cyclic drug which binds to a canyon pore of the virus. • In doing so it blocks attachment and uncoating of the viral particle. • It is orally bioavailable and can reduce peak viral titers by more than 99%.
Inhibitors of Genome Replication • Many viruses have evolved their own specific enzymatic mechanisms to preferentially replicate virus nucleic acids at the expense of cellular molecules. • There is often sufficient specificity in virus polymerases to provide a target for a specific antiviral agent and this method has produced the majority of the specific antiviral agents currently in use.
The majority of these drugs function as polymerase substrate, i.e. nucleoside analogues. • Toxicity varies considerably. • There is a serious problem with the pharmacokinetics of these nucleoside analogues (typically short serum half lives of 1-4 hours). • Nucleoside analogues are in fact pro-drugs, since they need to be phosphorylated before becoming effective. This is the key to their selectivity.
Nucleoside Analogues Acyclovir (acycloguanosine )- ACV. • Close to a perfect antiviral drug (specific, nontoxic). • Highly effective against herpes simplex virus (HSV), less so against varicella -zoster virus (VZV). • Highly selective and extremely safe. • Acyclic guanine derivative (differs from guanosine by having an acyclic side chain) that inhibits viral DNA synthesis.
Antiviral DrugsNucleoside and Nucleotide Analogs Figure 20.16a
It is a prodrug, a precursor of the antiviral compound. • Activation of the drug requires three kinase activities to be present in the cell to convert acyclovir to a triphosphate derivative, the actual antiviral drug. • It is phosphorylated by a virus thymidine kinase (200 times more efficiently than by cellular enzymes) producing a monophosphate form. • Cellular enzymes complete phosphorylation to the di - and triphosphate forms.
The triphosphorylated form competes with GTP inhibiting the enzyme (DNA polymerase) and causing termination of the growing viral DNA chain because of lack of 3' OH group. • ACV affinity to viral polymerase is more than 100 folds that to cellular polymerase. • Acyclovir has no effect on host DNA replication because the first kinase activity is not found in an noninfected cell.
Valacyclovir • the valyl ester derivative of ACV is more efficiently absorbed and rapidly converted to ACV increasing its bioavailability. • Penciclovir and famciclovir are related drugs. • Ganciclovir • It differs from ACV by the addition of a single hydroxymethyl group in the acyclic side chain; the result is a remarkable activity against CMV. • It is phosphorylated by a virus-encoded kinase (not thymidine kinase).
Adenine arabinoside (vidarabine)- Ara -A • A purine analogue (identical to adenosine but arabinose is substituted for ribose). • Phosphorylated by cellular enzymes ( toxicity?) to inhibit both viral and cellular polymerases but viral is 6-12 times more sensitive. • It was used for HSV and VZV before ACV.
Azidothymidine (Zidovudine) AZT • Dideoxy analog of thymidine (a synthetic thymidine analogue) that Inhibits viral DNA synthesis by inhibiting the reverse transcriptase enzyme. • It has higher affinity to RT (100 times) than to cellular DNA polymerase.
Efficiently phosphorylated (several steps of phosphorylation) to triphosphate by cellular kinases • AZT monophosphate competes with thymidine monophosphate • Much less selective than acylovir and has side effects • Does not eliminate previously incorporated provirus
Dideoxyinosine (Didanosine, ddI) • Dideoxycytidine (Zalcitabine, ddc) • Stavudine (d4t) • Lamivudine (3Tc). • All are inhibitors of reverse transcriptase used for the treatment of HIV infection. • Ribavarin • An analogue of guanosine but the base ring is incomplete and open. • It is active against DNA and RNA viruses by inhibiting inosinemonophosphatedehydrogenase and the synthesis of the mRNA 5- cap and RNA polymerase.
Iododeoxyuridine (Idoxyuridine) • Trifluorothymidine (Trifluridine) • Fluorouracil • All are analogues of thymidine and they inhibit the biosynthesis of thymidine or replace it and become incorporated in DNA. • Nucleotide Analogue (cidofovir) • It has the phosphate group attached and it inhibits DNA polymerase .
Nonnucleoside polymerase Inhibitors • Foscarnet: anti-herpes viruses. • Nevirapineanddelaviridine : anti HIV • Protease Inhibitors • Anti HIV: Saquinavir, Indinavir, andRitonavir • Anti HCV: Boceprevir and Telaprevir • The Unique structure of HIV protease and its essential role in the production of a functional virion has made this enzyme a good target for antiviral drugs.
Uncleavable mimics of gag- pol polyprotein • Inhibits HIV protease • Does not eliminate previously incorporated provirus but does prevent further spread • Resistance due to protease alterations
Inhibitors of Assembly, Maturation and Release • Zanamivir/ Relenza (aerosol) • Oseltamivir / Tamiflu (tables) • Peramivir/ IV for emergency use in hospitalized adults or children • Active against influenza as they are inhibitors of neuraminidase preventing the release of budded viruses from the cell. • Because they act late in the life cycle of the virus it is hoped that problems with resistance emergence will be minimized.
Neuraminidase Inhibitors Zanamivir & Oseltamivir • Mechanism: blocking of the active site of neuraminidase; prevents removal of sialic acid residues and results in clumping of viral progeny • Effective against influenza A & B. • Effective when flu symptoms are < 2 days old. • Inhibitors reduce disease syndrome by 1 day. • May decrease influenza secondary complications • Antiviral resistance can occur, but much less frequently than with the ion channel blockers amantadine or rimantadine
Neuraminidase inhibitors appear to have similar efficacy to the amantidine & rimantidine ion channel blockers for prevention & treatment of influenza • Neuraminidase inhibitors have Less Central Nerveous System side effects, but more Gastro-Intestinal effects • Neuraminidase Inhibitors are more expensive, but there is less risk of inducing virus resistance.
Methisazone • It is of historical importance as an inhibitor of poxviruses. • It was highly virus specific and did not affect cellular metabolism. • It blocked a late stage in viral replication resulting in the formation of immature, noninfectious virus particles.