1. Academic Validation
  2. Development of hexadecyloxypropyl tenofovir (CMX157) for treatment of infection caused by wild-type and nucleoside/nucleotide-resistant HIV

Development of hexadecyloxypropyl tenofovir (CMX157) for treatment of infection caused by wild-type and nucleoside/nucleotide-resistant HIV

  • Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2010 Jul;54(7):2901-9. doi: 10.1128/AAC.00068-10.
E Randall Lanier 1 Roger G Ptak Bernhard M Lampert Laurie Keilholz Tracy Hartman Robert W Buckheit Jr Marie K Mankowski Mark C Osterling Merrick R Almond George R Painter
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Chimerix Inc., 2505 Meridian Parkway, Suite 340, Durham, NC 27713, USA. [email protected]
Abstract

CMX157 is a lipid (1-0-hexadecyloxypropyl) conjugate of the acyclic nucleotide analog tenofovir (TFV) with activity against both wild-type and antiretroviral drug-resistant HIV strains, including multidrug nucleoside/nucleotide analog-resistant viruses. CMX157 was consistently >300-fold more active than tenofovir against multiple viruses in several different cell systems. CMX157 was active against all major subtypes of HIV-1 and HIV-2 in fresh human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and against all HIV-1 strains evaluated in monocyte-derived macrophages, with 50% effective concentrations (EC(50)s) ranging between 0.20 and 7.2 nM. The lower CMX157 EC(50)s can be attributed to better cellular uptake of CMX157, resulting in higher intracellular levels of the active Antiviral anabolite, TFV-diphosphate (TFV-PP), inside target cells. CMX157 produced >30-fold higher levels of TFV-PP in human PBMCs exposed to physiologically relevant concentrations of the compounds than did TFV. Unlike conventional prodrugs, including TFV disoproxil fumarate (Viread), CMX157 remains intact in plasma, facilitating uptake by target cells and decreasing relative systemic exposure to TFV. There was no detectable antagonism with CMX157 in combination with any marketed antiretroviral drug, and it possessed an excellent in vitro cytotoxicity profile. CMX157 is a promising clinical candidate to treat wild-type and antiretroviral drug-resistant HIV, including strains that fail to respond to all currently available nucleoside/nucleotide Reverse Transcriptase inhibitors.

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