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Zinc Ejection As a New Rationale For the Use of Cystamine and Related Disulfide-Containing Antiviral Agents in the Treatment of Aids

  1. Author:
    McDonnell, N. B.
    Deguzman, R. N.
    Rice, W. G.
    Turpin, J. A.
    Summers, M. F.
  2. Author Address

    Rice WG UNIV MARYLAND BALTIMORE CTY HOWARD HUGHES MED INST BALTIMORE, MD 21228 USA UNIV MARYLAND BALTIMORE CTY HOWARD HUGHES MED INST BALTIMORE, MD 21228 USA UNIV MARYLAND BALTIMORE CTY DEPT CHEM & BIOCHEM BALTIMORE, MD 21228 USA FREDERICK CANC RES & DEV CTR SAIC FREDERICK LAB ANTIVIRAL DRUG MECHANISMS FREDERICK, MD 21072 USA
    1. Year: 1997
  1. Journal: Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
    1. 40
    2. 13
    3. Pages: 1969-1976
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    The highly conserved and mutationally intolerant retroviral zinc finger motif of the HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein (NC) is an attractive target for drug therapy due to its participation in multiple stages of the viral replication cycle. A literature search identified cystamine, thiamine disulfide, and disulfiram as compounds that have been shown to inhibit HIV-1 replication by poorly defined mechanisms and that have electrophilic functional groups that might react with the metal-coordinating sulfur atoms of the retroviral zinc fingers and cause zinc ejection. H-1 NMR studies reveal that these compounds readily eject zinc from synthetic peptides with sequences corresponding to the HIV-1 NC zinc fingers, as well as from the intact HIV-1 NC protein. In contrast, the reduced forms of disulfiram and cystamine, diethyl dithiocarbamate and cysteamine, respectively, were found to be ineffective at zinc ejection, although cysteamine formed a transient complex with the zinc fingers. Studies with HIV-l-infected human T-cells and monocyte/macrophage cultures revealed that cystamine and cysteamine possess significant antiviral properties at nontoxic concentrations, which warrant their consideration as therapeutically useful anti-HIV agents. [References: 76]

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