gw-257406x and cyclopropavir

gw-257406x has been researched along with cyclopropavir* in 4 studies

Other Studies

4 other study(ies) available for gw-257406x and cyclopropavir

ArticleYear
In vitro evaluation of current and novel antivirals in combination against human cytomegalovirus.
    Antiviral research, 2018, Volume: 158

    Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) can cause severe disease in patients with compromised or immature immune systems. Currently approved pharmacotherapies for the treatment of systemic HCMV infections [ganciclovir (GCV), cidofovir (CDV), foscarnet] are limited by a high incidence of adverse effects and/or the development of drug resistance. Given that many of these drugs have the same viral target (HCMV-encoded DNA polymerase), cross-resistance is relatively common. The primary means to combat drug resistance is combination pharmacotherapy using therapeutics with different molecular mechanisms of action with the expectation that those combinations result in an additive or synergistic enhancement of effect; combinations that result in antagonism can, in many cases, be detrimental to the outcome of the patient. We therefore tested select combinations of approved (GCV, CDV, letermovir (LMV)) and experimental (brincidofovir (BCV), cyclopropavir (CPV), maribavir (MBV), BDCRB) drugs with the hypothesis that combinations of drugs with different and distinct molecular mechanisms of action will produce an additive and/or synergistic enhancement of antiviral effect against HCMV in vitro. Using MacSynergy II (a statistical package that measures enhancement or lessening of effect relative to zero/additive), select drug combination studies demonstrated combination indices ranging from 160 to 372 with 95% confidence intervals greater than zero indicating that these combinations elicit a synergistic enhancement of effect against HCMV in vitro. These data suggest that administration of a viral DNA polymerase inhibitor, MBV, and/or a viral terminase inhibitor in combination has the potential to address the resistance/cross-resistance problems associated with currently available therapeutics.

    Topics: Antiviral Agents; Benzimidazoles; Cell Line; Cidofovir; Cyclopropanes; Cytomegalovirus; Cytomegalovirus Infections; Cytosine; DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase; Drug Antagonism; Drug Combinations; Drug Resistance, Viral; Drug Synergism; Drug Therapy, Combination; Endodeoxyribonucleases; Fibroblasts; Foscarnet; Ganciclovir; Guanine; Humans; Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors; Organophosphonates; Ribonucleosides; Viral Proteins; Virus Replication

2018
Cytomegalovirus UL97 kinase catalytic domain mutations that confer multidrug resistance.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2013, Volume: 57, Issue:7

    Human cytomegalovirus UL97 kinase mutations that commonly confer ganciclovir resistance cluster in different parts of the gene than those conferring resistance to maribavir, an experimental UL97 kinase inhibitor. The drug resistance, growth, and autophosphorylation phenotypes of several unusual UL97 mutations in the kinase catalytic domain were characterized. Mutations V466G and P521L, described in clinical specimens from ganciclovir-treated subjects, conferred a UL97 kinase knockout phenotype with no autophosphorylation, a severe growth defect, and high-level ganciclovir, cyclopropavir, and maribavir resistance, similar to mutations at the catalytic lysine residue K355. Mutations F342S and V356G, observed after propagation under cyclopropavir in vitro, showed much less growth attenuation and moderate- to high-level resistance to all three drugs while maintaining UL97 autophosphorylation competence and normal cytopathic effect in cell culture, a novel phenotype. F342S is located in the ATP-binding P-loop and is homologous to a c-Abl kinase mutation conferring resistance to imatinib. UL97 mutants with relatively preserved growth fitness and multidrug resistance are of greater concern in antiviral therapy than the severely growth-impaired UL97 knockout mutants. Current diagnostic genotyping assays are unlikely to detect F342S and V356G, and the frequency of their appearance in clinical specimens remains undefined.

    Topics: Antiviral Agents; Benzimidazoles; Catalytic Domain; Cell Line; Cyclopropanes; Cytomegalovirus; Cytomegalovirus Infections; Drug Resistance, Multiple; Drug Resistance, Viral; Ganciclovir; Genotype; Guanine; Humans; Mutation; Phosphorylation; Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor); Ribonucleosides

2013
Cyclopropavir inhibits the normal function of the human cytomegalovirus UL97 kinase.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2011, Volume: 55, Issue:10

    Cyclopropavir (CPV) is active against human cytomegalovirus (CMV), as well as both variants of human herpesvirus 6 and human herpesvirus 8. The mechanism of action of CPV against CMV is similar to that of ganciclovir (GCV) in that it is phosphorylated initially by the CMV UL97 kinase, resulting in inhibition of viral DNA synthesis. Resistance to CPV maps to the UL97 kinase but is associated primarily with H520Q mutations and thus retains good antiviral activity against most GCV-resistant isolates. An examination of CMV-infected cultures treated with CPV revealed unusual cell morphology typically associated with the absence of UL97 kinase activity. A surrogate assay for UL97 kinase activity confirmed that CPV inhibited the activity of this enzyme and that its action was similar to the inhibition seen with maribavir (MBV) in this assay. Combination studies using real-time PCR indicated that, like MBV, CPV also antagonized the efficacy of GCV and were consistent with the observed inhibition of the UL97 kinase. Deep sequencing of CPV-resistant laboratory isolates identified a frameshift mutation in UL27, presumably to compensate for a loss of UL97 enzymatic activity. We conclude that the mechanism of action of CPV against CMV is complex and involves both the inhibition of DNA synthesis and the inhibition of the normal activity of the UL97 kinase.

    Topics: Animals; Antiviral Agents; Base Sequence; Benzimidazoles; Cell Line; Chlorocebus aethiops; COS Cells; Cyclopropanes; Cytomegalovirus; DNA, Viral; Drug Resistance, Viral; Frameshift Mutation; Ganciclovir; Guanine; Herpesvirus 6, Human; Herpesvirus 8, Human; High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing; Humans; Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor); Ribonucleosides; Sequence Analysis, DNA

2011
Stereoselective phosphorylation of cyclopropavir by pUL97 and competitive inhibition by maribavir.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2010, Volume: 54, Issue:8

    Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a widespread pathogen that can cause severe disease in immunologically immature and immunocompromised individuals. Cyclopropavir (CPV) is a guanine nucleoside analog active against human and murine cytomegaloviruses in cell culture and efficacious in mice by oral administration. Previous studies established that the mechanism of action of CPV involves inhibition of viral DNA synthesis. Based upon this action and the structural similarity of CPV to ganciclovir (GCV), we hypothesized that CPV must be phosphorylated to a triphosphate to inhibit HCMV DNA synthesis and that pUL97 is the enzyme responsible for the initial phosphorylation of CPV to a monophosphate (CPV-MP). We found that purified pUL97 phosphorylated CPV 45-fold more extensively than GCV, a known pUL97 substrate and the current standard of treatment for HCMV infections. Kinetic studies with CPV as the substrate for pUL97 demonstrated a Km of 1,750+/-210 microM. Introduction of 1.0 or 10 nM maribavir, a known pUL97 inhibitor, and subsequent Lineweaver-Burk analysis demonstrated competitive inhibition of CPV phosphorylation, with a Ki of 3.0+/-0.3 nM. Incubation of CPV with pUL97 combined with GMP kinase [known to preferentially phosphorylate the (+)-enantiomer of CPV-MP] established that pUL97 stereoselectively phosphorylates CPV to its (+)-monophosphate. These results elucidate the mechanism of CPV phosphorylation and help explain its selective antiviral action.

    Topics: Animals; Antiviral Agents; Benzimidazoles; Cyclopropanes; Cytomegalovirus; Ganciclovir; Guanine; Guanylate Kinases; Humans; Kinetics; Phosphorylation; Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor); Ribonucleosides; Stereoisomerism

2010