4.7 Article

Glycyrrhetinic acid derivatives as Zika virus inhibitors: Synthesis and antiviral activity in vitro

Journal

BIOORGANIC & MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 41, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bmc.2021.116204

Keywords

Triterpenoids; Glycyrrhetinic acid; Derivatives; Synthesis; Zika virus; Inhibitors

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST, Taiwan) [18-53-52004_MNT_a]
  3. MOST, Taiwan [MOST107-2923-B-039-001-MY3]
  4. China Medical University, Taiwan [CMU108-ASIA-11, CMU108-S12, CMU108-MF-42]
  5. Russian Federation [AAAA-A20120012090030-6]
  6. [AAAAA20-120012090026-9]
  7. [AAAA-A20-120012090029-0]

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This study focused on synthesizing a series of nitrogen and sulfur-containing derivatives of Glycyrrhetinic acid as potential inhibitors of Zika virus. Among the compounds tested, four active compounds were identified as effective in inhibiting Zika virus replication, with one compound showing the highest activity. Time-of-addition assays indicated the importance of specific functional groups in inhibiting different stages of the viral life cycle, and molecular docking analysis revealed potential interactions with viral protease enzymes. These findings suggest promising leads for developing new antiviral agents against Zika virus infection.
Zika virus (ZIKV) is an arbovirus of the Flaviviridae family (Flavivirus genus), causing serious neurological complications, such as Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS) in adults and fetal microcephaly. Licensed vaccines or specific antiviral agents against ZIKV do not currently exist. Therefore, the search and development of anti-ZIKV agents are particularly relevant and necessary. Glycyrrhetinic (3)5-hydroxy-11-oxo-18)5H-Olean-12-en-30-oic acid) (GA) 1 is one of the well-known pentacyclic triterpenoids isolated from licorice root (Glycyrrhiza glabra L., Gl. uralensis Fisher) (Leguminosae) possessing many biological features, including antiviral activity. This paper is devoted to the synthesis and studies of a number of nitrogen and sulfur-containing GA derivatives as ZIKV inhibitors. Sixteen GA and related triterpenoids (3)5-hydroxy-18)5H-Olean-12-en-30-oic acid and 3)5-hydroxy-11-oxo-18)5H-Olean-12 (13),18(19)-dien-30-oic acid) derivatives were synthesized (amides, semi- and thiosemicarbazones, and 1,2,3thiadiazoles) and antiviral activity against ZIKV was studied in vitro, including the inhibitory assays on cytopathic effect (CPE), viral protein synthesis, and replication stages. Four active compounds were found among GA derivatives tested, 13 (3-O-acetyl-30-aminopyridine GA), 16 (3-semicarbazone-30-butyl GA), 18 (1,2,3-thiadiazole-30-methyl GA), and 19 (1,2,3-thiadiazole-30-butyl GA) with IC50 < 1 mu M against ZIKV replication. These compounds had a stronger inhibitory activity on ZIKV-induced CPE and viral protein translation in infected cells as compared to derivatives of 11-desoxo-GA. The most active compound was amide 13 (IC50 0.13 mu M, TI > 384). Time-of-addition assays indicated that 1,2,3-thiadiazole ring is important for inhibiting viral entry stage (compounds 18 and 19), while the 30-butyl ester group influenced on post-entry stage (compound 19). The molecular docking analysis demonstrated that lead compounds 13 and 19 forms a hydrogen-bond interaction with the catalytic triad (His51-Asp75-Ser135) of ZIKV NS2B-NS3 protease. Therefore, the active GA derivatives are promising for developing new antiviral agents against ZIKV infection.

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