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Development of Novel Anti-HIV Pyrimidobenzothiazine Derivatives

English · Paperback / Softback

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The author successfully developed novel anti-HIV PD 404182 derivatives that exhibited submicromolar inhibitory activity against both HIV-1 and HIV-2. His thesis is in three parts. The first part expounds efficient methods for the synthesis of tricyclic heterocycles related to PD 404182 based on the sp2-carbon-heteroatom bond formations. Starting from arene or haloarene, C-O, C-N, or C-S bonds were formed by simply changing the reactants. These synthetic methods provide powerful approaches for the divergent preparation of pyrimido-benzoxazine, -quinazoline, or -benzothiazine derivatives. The second part explains SAR studies of PD 404182 for the development of anti-HIV agents. Through optimization studies of the central 1,3-thiazin-2-imine core, the benzene and cyclic amidine ring parts, 3-fold more potent inhibitors were obtained compared with the lead compound. The author also reveals by a time-of-drug-addition experiment that PD 404182 derivatives impaired HIV replication at the binding or fusion stage. The third part of the thesis elucidates the development of photoaffinity probes for the target identification of PD 404182. By the photolabeling experiment of HIV-1-infected H9 cells using these probes, the author detected proteins specifically bound to PD 404182. These new anti-HIV agents may be promising agents for anti-HIV therapy because their mechanisms of action differ from those of the currently approved anti-HIV agents.

List of contents

Introduction.- Development of Divergent Synthetic Methods of Pyrimidobenzothiazine and Related Tricyclic Heterocycles.- Structure-Activity Relationship Study of PD 404182 Derivatives for the Highly Potent Anti-HIV Agents.- Design and Synthesis of Photoaffinity Probes and Their Application to Target Identification Study of PD 404182.- Conclusion.

About the author

Department of Chemistry
University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Ph. D. in Pharmaceutical Sciences
Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences,
Kyoto University, Japan

Summary

The author successfully developed novel anti-HIV PD 404182 derivatives that exhibited submicromolar inhibitory activity against both HIV-1 and HIV-2. His thesis is in three parts. The first part expounds efficient methods for the synthesis of tricyclic heterocycles related to PD 404182 based on the sp2-carbon−heteroatom bond formations. Starting from arene or haloarene, C-O, C-N, or C-S bonds were formed by simply changing the reactants. These synthetic methods provide powerful approaches for the divergent preparation of pyrimido-benzoxazine, -quinazoline, or -benzothiazine derivatives. The second part explains SAR studies of PD 404182 for the development of anti-HIV agents. Through optimization studies of the central 1,3-thiazin-2-imine core, the benzene and cyclic amidine ring parts, 3-fold more potent inhibitors were obtained compared with the lead compound. The author also reveals by a time-of-drug-addition experiment that PD 404182 derivatives impaired HIV replication at the binding or fusion stage. The third part of the thesis elucidates the development of photoaffinity probes for the target identification of PD 404182. By the photolabeling experiment of HIV-1-infected H9 cells using these probes, the author detected proteins specifically bound to PD 404182. These new anti-HIV agents may be promising agents for anti-HIV therapy because their mechanisms of action differ from those of the currently approved anti-HIV agents.

Product details

Authors Tsukasa Mizuhara
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.2016
 
EAN 9784431561651
ISBN 978-4-431-56165-1
No. of pages 151
Dimensions 155 mm x 9 mm x 235 mm
Weight 260 g
Illustrations XI, 151 p. 98 illus., 3 illus. in color.
Series Springer Theses
Springer Theses
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Chemistry > Organic chemistry

C, ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, biochemistry, Chemistry and Materials Science, Medical microbiology & virology, Industrial chemistry & chemical engineering, Pharmaceutical technology, Pharmaceutics, Pharmaceutical Sciences/Technology, MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, Virology

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