Clinical evidence of hematopoietic restoration with placental/umbilical cord blood (PCB) grafts indicates that PCB can be a useful source of hematopoietic stem cells for routine bone marrow reconstitution. In the unrelated setting, human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-matched donors must be obtained for candidate patients and, hence, large panels of frozen HLA-typed PCB units must be established.
The urgent need for efficacious drugs to treat chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection requires a concerted effort to develop inhibitors specific for virally encoded enzymes. We demonstrate that 2-C-methyl ribonucleosides are efficient chain-terminating inhibitors of HCV genome replication. Characterization of drug-resistant HCV replicons defined a single S282T mutation within the active site of the viral polymerase that conferred loss of sensitivity to structurally related compounds in both replicon and isolated polymerase assays. Biochemical analyses demonstrated that resistance at the level of the enzyme results from a combination of reduced affinity of the mutant polymerase for the drug and an increased ability to extend the incorporated nucleoside analog. Importantly, the combination of these agents with interferon-␣ results in synergistic inhibition of HCV genome replication in cell culture. Furthermore, 2-C-methyl-substituted ribonucleosides also inhibited replication of genetically related viruses such as bovine diarrhea virus, yellow fever, and West African Nile viruses. These observations, together with the finding that 2-C-methyl-guanosine in particular has a favorable pharmacological profile, suggest that this class of compounds may have broad utility in the treatment of HCV and other flavivirus infections. Hepatitis C virus (HCV)1 is the most common blood-borne infection and a major cause of chronic liver disease and liver transplantation in industrialized countries. The prevalence of HCV infection is estimated to be ϳ5-fold greater than HIV infection and ranges from 1-5% in most developed countries (1). Current therapy is both poorly tolerated and has limited efficacy, with less than 50% response rates among patients infected with the most prevalent virus genotype (1b) (1). Currently approved drugs for the treatment of hepatitis C are interferon-␣ and ribavirin, neither of which appears to act directly on the virus, and their antiviral effects appear to be mediated by multiple, indirect mechanisms. Therefore, there is a need for more efficient and better tolerated anti-HCV agents.The success of antiviral therapies based on chemotherapeutic agents targeting viral polymerases has prompted intense efforts to develop inhibitors of HCV NS5B, the virally encoded RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp). Studies with HIV reverse transcriptase validate the clinical utility of two distinct classes of viral polymerase inhibitors, nucleoside and non-nucleoside inhibitors. Nucleoside inhibitors function as competitive substrate analogs that prevent RNA chain elongation when incorporated by the viral enzyme, resulting in premature chain termination (2, 3). HIV reverse transcriptase non-nucleoside inhibitors bind to a site residing outside the enzyme active site and inhibit catalysis by an allosteric mechanism (4, 5). Several putative allosteric binding sites on the surface of HCV NS5B have been suggested based on recent structural studies (6 -8), and several chemical classes of NS5B non-nucleoside inhibitors have ...
The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (NS5B) of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is essential for the replication of viral RNA and thus constitutes a valid target for the chemotherapeutic intervention of HCV infection. In this report, we describe the identification of 2-substituted nucleosides as inhibitors of HCV replication. The 5-triphosphates of 2-C-methyladenosine and 2-O-methylcytidine are found to inhibit NS5B-catalyzed RNA synthesis in vitro, in a manner that is competitive with substrate nucleoside triphosphate. NS5B is able to incorporate either nucleotide analog into RNA as determined with gel-based incorporation assays but is impaired in its ability to extend the incorporated analog by addition of the next nucleotide. In a subgenomic replicon cell line, 2-C-methyladenosine and 2-O-methylcytidine inhibit HCV RNA replication. The 5-triphosphates of both nucleosides are detected intracellularly following addition of the nucleosides to the media. However, significantly higher concentrations of 2-C-methyladenosine triphosphate than 2-O-methylcytidine triphosphate are detected, consistent with the greater potency of 2-C-methyladenosine in the replicon assay, despite similar inhibition of NS5B by the triphosphates in the in vitro enzyme assays. Thus, the 2-modifications of natural substrate nucleosides transform these molecules into potent inhibitors of HCV replication. Hepatitis C virus (HCV)1 infection is the leading cause of sporadic, post-transfusion, non-A non-B hepatitis (1, 2). One hundred seventy million people worldwide are thought to be infected with hepatitis C virus of which an estimated 4 million reside in the United States (3). Approximately 80% of infected individuals progress to chronic infection. Long term chronic HCV infection can lead to liver cirrhosis and to hepatocellular carcinoma (4 -6). Currently, the recommended therapy is treatment with a combination of interferon ␣2b and ribavirin, which results in a sustained viral response in 40% of patients (7,8). Investigational therapies using a combination of pegylated interferon and ribavirin have lead to an sustained viral response in 54% of patients, but the response rate (42%) of patients harboring HCV genotype 1 is lower (9, 10). Consequently, additional therapies for HCV infection are needed.Antiviral chemotherapies based on administration of analogs of deoxynucleosides have been widely successful as treatment for HIV, herpes virus, and hepatitis B infection (11,12). Intracellular phosphorylation of the nucleoside analog to the triphosphate creates the active form of the inhibitor that then serves as a substrate for the viral polymerase. Generally, incorporation of the nucleotide analog at the 3Ј-end of the replicating viral DNA causes termination of DNA synthesis, owing to the lack of the 3Ј-hydroxyl required for extension. These successes suggest that an investigation of ribonucleoside analogs as inhibitors of HCV replication would be worthwhile.The HCV NS5B protein, the RNA-dependent polymerase responsible for the synthesis of the viral RNA geno...
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) will continue to be a serious global health threat for many years to come because of the chronic nature of the infection, its high prevalence and the significant morbidity of the resulting disease. Recently, a small number of molecules have produced encouraging results in proof-of-concept clinical trials. At the same time, preclinical evidence is accumulating that development of resistance will eventually limit the efficacy of new drugs. Thus, combinations of multiple agents will be required to treat chronic HCV infection.
The phenotype induced by the GATA-1 low (neo␦HS) mutation is here further characterized by analyzing the hemopoietic system during the aging (up to 20 months) of a GATA-1 low colony (135 mutants and 40 normal littermates). Mutants expressed normal hematocrit values (Hct ؍ 45.9 ؎ 4.0) until 12 months but became anemic from 15 months on (Hct ؍ 30.9 ؎ 3.9; P < .05). Anemia was associated with several markers of myelofibrosis such as the presence of tear-drop poikilocytes and progenitor cells in the blood, collagen fibers in the marrow and in the spleen, and hemopoietic foci in the liver. Semiquantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction showed that growth factor genes implicated in the development of myelofibrosis (such as osteocalcin, transforming growth factor-1, platelet-derived growth factor, and vascular endothelial growth factor) were all expressed in the marrow from the mutants at higher levels than in corresponding normal tissues. The GATA-1 low mutants experienced a slow progression of the disease because the final exitus was not observed until at least 15 months with a probability of survival more favorable than that of W/W v mice concurrently kept in the animal facility (P < .001, by Kaplan-Meier analysis). In conclusion, impaired GATA-1 expression may contribute to the development of myelofibrosis, and the GATA-1 low mutants may represent a suitable animal model for the human disease that may shed light on its pathogenesis. (Blood.
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