psi-6130 and 4--azidocytidine

psi-6130 has been researched along with 4--azidocytidine* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for psi-6130 and 4--azidocytidine

ArticleYear
The hepatitis C virus replicon presents a higher barrier to resistance to nucleoside analogs than to nonnucleoside polymerase or protease inhibitors.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2008, Volume: 52, Issue:5

    Specific inhibitors of hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication that target the NS3/4A protease (e.g., VX-950) or the NS5B polymerase (e.g., R1479/R1626, PSI-6130/R7128, NM107/NM283, and HCV-796) have advanced into clinical development. Treatment of patients with VX-950 or HCV-796 rapidly selected for drug-resistant variants after a 14-day monotherapy treatment period. However, no viral resistance was identified after monotherapy with R1626 (prodrug of R1479) or NM283 (prodrug of NM107) after 14 days of monotherapy. Based upon the rapid selection of resistance to the protease and nonnucleoside inhibitors during clinical trials and the lack of selection of resistance to the nucleoside inhibitors, we used the replicon system to determine whether nucleoside inhibitors demonstrate a higher genetic barrier to resistance than protease and nonnucleoside inhibitors. Treatment of replicon cells with nucleoside inhibitors at 10 and 15 times the 50% effective concentration resulted in clearance of the replicon, while treatment with a nonnucleoside or protease inhibitor selected resistant colonies. In combination, the presence of a nucleoside inhibitor reduced the frequency of colonies resistant to the other classes of inhibitors. These results indicate that the HCV replicon presents a higher barrier to the selection of resistance to nucleoside inhibitors than to nonnucleoside or protease inhibitors. Furthermore, the combination of a nonnucleoside or protease inhibitor with a nucleoside polymerase inhibitor could have a clear clinical benefit through the delay of resistance emergence.

    Topics: Antiviral Agents; Cytidine; Deoxycytidine; Drug Resistance, Viral; Hepacivirus; Nucleosides; Oligopeptides; Protease Inhibitors; Replicon; Serine Endopeptidases; Viral Nonstructural Proteins; Virus Replication

2008
Selected replicon variants with low-level in vitro resistance to the hepatitis C virus NS5B polymerase inhibitor PSI-6130 lack cross-resistance with R1479.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2008, Volume: 52, Issue:12

    PSI-6130 (beta-D-2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-2'-C-methylcytidine) is a selective inhibitor of hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication that targets the NS5B polymerase. R7128, the prodrug of PSI-6130, has shown antiviral efficacy in patients chronically infected with HCV genotype 1a (GT-1a) and GT-1b. We observed that the compound exhibited potent in vitro activity against laboratory-optimized HCV replicons as well as against a panel of replicons containing NS5B HCV polymerases derived from GT-1a and GT-1b clinical isolates. We used the HCV replicon cell system to examine the emergence of variants with reduced sensitivity to PSI-6130. Short-term treatment of cells harboring the HCV subgenomic replicon with PSI-6130 cleared the replicon without generating resistant variants. Long-term culture of the cells under the compound selection generated the S282T substitution in a complex pattern with other amino acid substitutions in the NS5B polymerase. The presence of the coselected substitutions did not increase the moderate three- to sixfold loss of sensitivity to PSI-6130 mediated by the S282T substitution; however, their presence enhanced the replication capacity compared to the replication levels seen with the S282T substitution alone. We also observed a lack of cross-resistance between PSI-6130 and R1479 and demonstrated that long-term culture selection with PSI-6130 in replicon cells harboring preexisting mutations resistant to R1479 (S96T/N142T) results in the emergence of the S282T substitution and the reversion of S96T to wild-type serine. In conclusion, PSI-6130 presents a high barrier to resistance selection in vitro, selects for variants exhibiting only low-level resistance, and lacks cross-resistance with R1479, supporting the continued development of the prodrug R7128 as a therapeutic agent for the treatment of HCV infection.

    Topics: Antiviral Agents; Cell Line; Cytidine; Deoxycytidine; Drug Resistance, Viral; Genetic Variation; Hepacivirus; Humans; Molecular Sequence Data; Replicon; RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Viral Nonstructural Proteins

2008