4.7 Article

Identification of Non-Macrocyclic Small Molecule Inhibitors against the NS3/4A Serine Protease of Hepatitis C Virus through in Silico Screening

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING
Volume 52, Issue 8, Pages 2245-2256

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ci300177p

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [TGMCB090040, TG-MCB090168]

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Drug discovery and design for inhibition of the Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) NS3/4A serine protease is a major challenge. The broad, shallow, and generally featureless nature of the active site makes it a difficult target for hit selection especially using standard docking programs. There are several macrocyclic NS3/4A protease inhibitors that have been approved or are in clinical trials to treat chronic HCV (alone or as combination therapy), but most of the current therapies for HCV infection have untoward side effects, indicating a continuing medical need for the discovery of novel therapeutics with improved efficacy. In this study, we designed and implemented a two tiered and progressive docking regime that successfully identified five non-macrocyclic small molecules that show inhibitory activity in the low micromolar range. Of these, four compounds show varying inhibition against HCV subgenotypes 1b, 1a, 2a, and 4d. The top inhibitor (3) has an IC50 value of 15 mu M against both subgenotypes lb and 2a of the NS3/4A protease enzyme. Another inhibitor, 1, inhibits all four subgenotypes with moderate activity, showing highest activity for genotype 2a (24 mu M). The five inhibitors presented in this study could be valuable candidates for future hit to lead optimization. Additionally, enzyme-inhibitor interaction models presented herein provide key information regarding structural differences between the active sites of the NS3/4A protease of the HCV subgenotype la and lb that might explain the variable inhibitory activity between subgenotypes of the small molecule inhibitors identified here.

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