1. Academic Validation
  2. Chemical genetics strategy identifies an HCV NS5A inhibitor with a potent clinical effect

Chemical genetics strategy identifies an HCV NS5A inhibitor with a potent clinical effect

  • Nature. 2010 May 6;465(7294):96-100. doi: 10.1038/nature08960.
Min Gao 1 Richard E Nettles Makonen Belema Lawrence B Snyder Van N Nguyen Robert A Fridell Michael H Serrano-Wu David R Langley Jin-Hua Sun Donald R O'Boyle 2nd Julie A Lemm Chunfu Wang Jay O Knipe Caly Chien Richard J Colonno Dennis M Grasela Nicholas A Meanwell Lawrence G Hamann
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Virology, Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, 5 Research Parkway, Wallingford, Connecticut 06492, USA.
Abstract

The worldwide prevalence of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) Infection is estimated to be approaching 200 million people. Current therapy relies upon a combination of pegylated interferon-alpha and ribavirin, a poorly tolerated regimen typically associated with less than 50% sustained virological response rate in those infected with genotype 1 virus. The development of direct-acting Antiviral agents to treat HCV has focused predominantly on inhibitors of the viral enzymes NS3 protease and the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase NS5B. Here we describe the profile of BMS-790052, a small molecule inhibitor of the HCV NS5A protein that exhibits picomolar half-maximum effective concentrations (EC(50)) towards replicons expressing a broad range of HCV genotypes and the JFH-1 genotype 2a infectious virus in Cell Culture. In a phase I clinical trial in patients chronically infected with HCV, administration of a single 100-mg dose of BMS-790052 was associated with a 3.3 log(10) reduction in mean viral load measured 24 h post-dose that was sustained for an additional 120 h in two patients infected with genotype 1b virus. Genotypic analysis of samples taken at baseline, 24 and 144 h post-dose revealed that the major HCV variants observed had substitutions at amino-acid positions identified using the in vitro replicon system. These results provide the first clinical validation of an inhibitor of HCV NS5A, a protein with no known enzymatic function, as an approach to the suppression of virus replication that offers potential as part of a therapeutic regimen based on combinations of HCV inhibitors.

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