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Antiviral Agents

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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. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Antiviral Agents

Antiviral Agents

Page 2: 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.

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.

Page 3: Antiviral Agents

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Page 4: Antiviral Agents

The pathway for drug discovery

Page 5: Antiviral Agents

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

Page 6: Antiviral Agents

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

Page 7: Antiviral Agents

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

Page 8: Antiviral Agents

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.

Page 9: Antiviral Agents

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.

Page 10: Antiviral Agents

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).

Page 11: Antiviral Agents

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%.

Page 12: Antiviral Agents

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.

Page 13: Antiviral Agents

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.

Page 14: Antiviral Agents

Nucleoside AnaloguesAcyclovir (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.

Page 15: Antiviral Agents

Antiviral DrugsNucleoside and Nucleotide

Analogs

Figure 20.16a

Page 16: Antiviral Agents

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.

Page 17: Antiviral Agents

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.

Page 18: Antiviral Agents

Antiviral DrugsNucleoside and Nucleotide

Analogs

Page 19: Antiviral Agents

Valacyclovir

othe valyl ester derivative of ACV is more efficiently absorbed and rapidly converted to ACV increasing its bioavailability.

oPenciclovir and famciclovir are related drugs.

Ganciclovir

oIt differs from ACV by the addition of a single hydroxymethyl group in the acyclic side chain; the result is a remarkable activity against CMV.

oIt is phosphorylated by a virus-encoded kinase (not thymidine kinase).

Page 20: Antiviral Agents

Adenine arabinoside (vidarabine)- Ara -A

oA purine analogue (identical to adenosine but arabinose is substituted for ribose).

oPhosphorylated by cellular enzymes ( toxicity?) to inhibit both viral and cellular polymerases but viral is 6-12 times more sensitive.

oIt was used for HSV and VZV before ACV.

Page 21: Antiviral Agents

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.

Page 22: Antiviral Agents

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

Page 23: Antiviral Agents

Dideoxyinosine (Didanosine, ddI) Dideoxycytidine (Zalcitabine, ddc) Stavudine (d4t) Lamivudine (3Tc).

oAll are inhibitors of reverse transcriptase used for the treatment of HIV infection.

Ribavarin

oAn analogue of guanosine but the base ring is incomplete and open.

oIt is active against DNA and RNA viruses by inhibiting inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase and the synthesis of the mRNA 5- cap and RNA polymerase.

Page 24: Antiviral Agents

Iododeoxyuridine (Idoxyuridine) Trifluorothymidine (Trifluridine) Fluorouracil

oAll are analogues of thymidine and they inhibit the biosynthesis of thymidine or replace it and become incorporated in DNA.

Nucleotide Analogue (cidofovir)

oIt has the phosphate group attached and it inhibits DNA polymerase .

Page 25: Antiviral Agents

Nonnucleoside polymerase Inhibitors

Foscarnet: anti-herpes viruses. Nevirapine and delaviridine : anti HIV

Protease Inhibitors Anti HIV: Saquinavir, Indinavir, and

Ritonavir

oAnti HCV: Boceprevir and Telaprevir

oThe 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.

Page 26: Antiviral Agents

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

Page 27: Antiviral Agents

Inhibitors of Assembly, Maturation and Release

Zanamivir/ Relenza (aerosol) Oseltamivir / Tamiflu (tables) Peramivir/ IV for emergency use in hospitalized adults or children

oActive against influenza as they are inhibitors of neuraminidase preventing the release of budded viruses from the cell.

oBecause they act late in the life cycle of the

virus it is hoped that problems with resistance emergence will be minimized.

Page 28: Antiviral Agents

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

Page 29: Antiviral Agents

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.

Page 30: Antiviral Agents

Methisazone

oIt is of historical importance as an inhibitor of poxviruses.

oIt was highly virus specific and did not

affect cellular metabolism. oIt blocked a late stage in viral replication

resulting in the formation of immature, noninfectious virus particles.