Characterization of Resistance to Non-obligate Chain-terminating Ribonucleoside Analogs That Inhibit Hepatitis C Virus Replication in Vitro

Giovanni Migliaccio(Institute of Molecular Biology and Pathology), Joanne E. Tomassini(United States Military Academy), Steven S. Carroll(United States Military Academy), Licia Tomei(Institute of Molecular Biology and Pathology), Sergio Altamura(Institute of Molecular Biology and Pathology), Balkrishen Bhat(Ionis Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Linda Bartholomew(Institute of Molecular Biology and Pathology), Michele Bosserman(United States Military Academy), Alessandra Ceccacci(Institute of Molecular Biology and Pathology), Lawrence F. Colwell(Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA (United States)), Riccardo Cortese(Institute of Molecular Biology and Pathology), Raffaele De Francesco(Institute of Molecular Biology and Pathology), Anne B. Eldrup(Ionis Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Krista Getty(United States Military Academy), Xiaoli Hou(United States Military Academy), Robert L. LaFemina(United States Military Academy), Steven W. Ludmerer(United States Military Academy), Malcolm MacCoss(Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA (United States)), Daniel R. McMasters(United States Military Academy), Mark W. Stahlhut(United States Military Academy), David B. Olsen(United States Military Academy), Daria J. Hazuda(United States Military Academy), Osvaldo Flores(United States Military Academy)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
November 26, 2003
Cited by 324Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The urgent need for efficacious drugs to treat chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection requires a concerted effort to develop inhibitors specific for virally encoded enzymes. We demonstrate that 2'-C-methyl ribonucleosides are efficient chain-terminating inhibitors of HCV genome replication. Characterization of drug-resistant HCV replicons defined a single S282T mutation within the active site of the viral polymerase that conferred loss of sensitivity to structurally related compounds in both replicon and isolated polymerase assays. Biochemical analyses demonstrated that resistance at the level of the enzyme results from a combination of reduced affinity of the mutant polymerase for the drug and an increased ability to extend the incorporated nucleoside analog. Importantly, the combination of these agents with interferon-alpha results in synergistic inhibition of HCV genome replication in cell culture. Furthermore, 2'-C-methyl-substituted ribonucleosides also inhibited replication of genetically related viruses such as bovine diarrhea virus, yellow fever, and West African Nile viruses. These observations, together with the finding that 2'-C-methyl-guanosine in particular has a favorable pharmacological profile, suggest that this class of compounds may have broad utility in the treatment of HCV and other flavivirus infections.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis