bms-986094 and balapiravir

bms-986094 has been researched along with balapiravir* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for bms-986094 and balapiravir

ArticleYear
Structure-activity relationship analysis of mitochondrial toxicity caused by antiviral ribonucleoside analogs.
    Antiviral research, 2017, Volume: 143

    Recent cases of severe toxicity during clinical trials have been associated with antiviral ribonucleoside analogs (e.g. INX-08189 and balapiravir). Some have hypothesized that the active metabolites of toxic ribonucleoside analogs, the triphosphate forms, inadvertently target human mitochondrial RNA polymerase (POLRMT), thus inhibiting mitochondrial RNA transcription and protein synthesis. Others have proposed that the prodrug moiety released from the ribonucleoside analogs might instead cause toxicity. Here, we report the mitochondrial effects of several clinically relevant and structurally diverse ribonucleoside analogs including NITD-008, T-705 (favipiravir), R1479 (parent nucleoside of balapiravir), PSI-7851 (sofosbuvir), and INX-08189 (BMS-986094). We found that efficient substrates and chain terminators of POLRMT, such as the nucleoside triphosphate forms of R1479, NITD-008, and INX-08189, are likely to cause mitochondrial toxicity in cells, while weaker chain terminators and inhibitors of POLRMT such as T-705 ribonucleoside triphosphate do not elicit strong in vitro mitochondrial effects. Within a fixed 3'-deoxy or 2'-C-methyl ribose scaffold, changing the base moiety of nucleotides did not strongly affect their inhibition constant (K

    Topics: Adenosine; Amides; Antiviral Agents; Cell Line; Cytidine; DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases; Guanosine Monophosphate; Humans; Inhibitory Concentration 50; Mitochondria; Mitochondrial Proteins; Nucleosides; Prodrugs; Protein Biosynthesis; Pyrazines; Ribonucleosides; RNA; RNA, Mitochondrial; Sofosbuvir; Structure-Activity Relationship; Transcription Initiation Site; Transcription, Genetic

2017
Role of Mitochondrial RNA Polymerase in the Toxicity of Nucleotide Inhibitors of Hepatitis C Virus.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2016, Volume: 60, Issue:2

    Toxicity has emerged during the clinical development of many but not all nucleotide inhibitors (NI) of hepatitis C virus (HCV). To better understand the mechanism for adverse events, clinically relevant HCV NI were characterized in biochemical and cellular assays, including assays of decreased viability in multiple cell lines and primary cells, interaction with human DNA and RNA polymerases, and inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis and respiration. NI that were incorporated by the mitochondrial RNA polymerase (PolRMT) inhibited mitochondrial protein synthesis and showed a corresponding decrease in mitochondrial oxygen consumption in cells. The nucleoside released by the prodrug balapiravir (R1626), 4'-azido cytidine, was a highly selective inhibitor of mitochondrial RNA transcription. The nucleotide prodrug of 2'-C-methyl guanosine, BMS-986094, showed a primary effect on mitochondrial function at submicromolar concentrations, followed by general cytotoxicity. In contrast, NI containing multiple ribose modifications, including the active forms of mericitabine and sofosbuvir, were poor substrates for PolRMT and did not show mitochondrial toxicity in cells. In general, these studies identified the prostate cell line PC-3 as more than an order of magnitude more sensitive to mitochondrial toxicity than the commonly used HepG2 cells. In conclusion, analogous to the role of mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma in toxicity caused by some 2'-deoxynucleotide analogs, there is an association between HCV NI that interact with PolRMT and the observation of adverse events. More broadly applied, the sensitive methods for detecting mitochondrial toxicity described here may help in the identification of mitochondrial toxicity prior to clinical testing.

    Topics: Antiviral Agents; Cell Line; Deoxycytidine; DNA Polymerase gamma; DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase; DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases; Guanosine Monophosphate; Hepacivirus; Hepatitis C, Chronic; Humans; Mitochondria; Nucleosides; Oxygen Consumption; Protein Biosynthesis; RNA; RNA, Mitochondrial; Sofosbuvir; Transcription, Genetic; Virus Replication

2016