Publication | Closed Access
Rational Design of Potent, Bioavailable, Nonpeptide Cyclic Ureas as HIV Protease Inhibitors
834
Citations
44
References
1994
Year
Combinatorial ChemistryBioorganic ChemistryNonpeptide Cyclic UreasChemistryHuman Immunodeficiency VirusPharmaceutical ChemistryMedicinal ChemistryRational DesignBiochemistryMedicineHivMechanistic InformationDrug DevelopmentPharmacologyAntiviral CompoundStructural Water MoleculeNatural SciencesRational Drug DesignPeptide SynthesisHiv Protease InhibitorsDrug Discovery
Mechanistic information and structure-based design methods have been used to design a series of nonpeptide cyclic ureas that are potent inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) protease and HIV replication. A fundamental feature of these inhibitors is the cyclic urea carbonyl oxygen that mimics the hydrogen-bonding features of a key structural water molecule. The success of the design in both displacing and mimicking the structural water molecule was confirmed by x-ray crystallographic studies. Highly selective, preorganized inhibitors with relatively low molecular weight and high oral bioavailability were synthesized.
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