SCH 503034, a Mechanism-Based Inhibitor of Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Protease, Suppresses Polyprotein Maturation and Enhances the Antiviral Activity of Alpha Interferon in Replicon Cells

Bruce A. Malcolm(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), R. Liu(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Frederick Lahser(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Sudhir Agrawal(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Barbara Bélanger, Nancy Butkiewicz(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Robert A. Chase(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Ferdous Gheyas, Andrea Hart(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), David Hesk(Institute of Medicinal Plant Development), Paul Ingravallo(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Chuan-Kui Jiang(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Rong Kong(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Jing Lü(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), John Pichardo(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Andrew Prongay, Angela Skelton(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Xiao Tong(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Srikanth Venkatraman(Institute of Medicinal Plant Development), Ellen Xia(Institute of Virology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Viyyoor Girijavallabhan(Institute of Medicinal Plant Development), F. George Njoroge(Institute of Medicinal Plant Development)
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
February 22, 2006
Cited by 317Open Access
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Abstract

Cleavage of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) polyprotein by the viral NS3 protease releases functional viral proteins essential for viral replication. Recent studies by Foy and coworkers strongly suggest that NS3-mediated cleavage of host factors may abrogate cellular response to alpha interferon (IFN-alpha) (E. Foy, K. Li, R. Sumpter, Jr., Y.-M. Loo, C. L. Johnson, C. Wang, P. M. Fish, M. Yoneyama, T. Fujita, S. M. Lemon, and M. Gale, Jr., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 102:2986-2991, 2005, and E. Foy, K. Li, C. Wang, R. Sumpter, Jr., M. Ikeda, S. M. Lemon, and M. Gale, Jr., Science 300:1145-1148, 2003). Blockage of NS3 protease activity therefore is expected to inhibit HCV replication by both direct suppression of viral protein production as well as by restoring host responsiveness to IFN. Using structure-assisted design, a ketoamide inhibitor, SCH 503034, was generated which demonstrated potent (overall inhibition constant, 14 nM) time-dependent inhibition of the NS3 protease in cell-free enzyme assays as well as robust in vitro activity in the HCV replicon system, as monitored by immunofluorescence and real-time PCR analysis. Continuous exposure of replicon-bearing cell lines to six times the 90% effective concentration of SCH 503034 for 15 days resulted in a greater than 4-log reduction in replicon RNA. The combination of SCH 503034 with IFN was more effective in suppressing replicon synthesis than either compound alone, supporting the suggestion of Foy and coworkers that combinations of IFN with protease inhibitors would lead to enhanced therapeutic efficacy.


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