Dihydropyrancarboxamides Related to Zanamivir: A New Series of Inhibitors
of Influenza Virus Sialidases. 1. Discovery, Synthesis, Biological Activity, and
Structure−Activity Relationships of 4-Guanidino- and
4-Amino-4H-pyran-6-carboxamides
posted on 1998-02-18, 00:00authored byPaul W. Smith, Steven L. Sollis, Peter D. Howes, Peter C. Cherry, Ian D. Starkey, Kevin N. Cobley, Helen Weston, Jan Scicinski, Andrew Merritt, Andrew Whittington, Paul Wyatt, Neil Taylor, Darren Green, Richard Bethell, Safia Madar, Robert J. Fenton, Peter J. Morley, Tony Pateman, Alan Beresford
4-Amino- and 4-guanidino-4H-pyran-6-carboxamides
4 and 5 related to zanamivir (GG167)
are a new class of inhibitors of influenza virus sialidases.
Structure−activity studies reveal
that, in general, secondary amides are weak inhibitors of both
influenza A and B viral sialidases.
However, tertiary amides, which contain one or more small alkyl
groups, show much greater
inhibitory activity, particularly against the influenza A virus enzyme.
The sialidase inhibitory
activities of these compounds correlate well with their in vitro
antiviral efficacy, and several
of the most potent analogues displayed useful antiviral activity in
vivo when evaluated in a
mouse model of influenza A virus infection. Carboxamides which
were highly active sialidase
inhibitors in vitro also showed good antiviral activity in the mouse
efficacy model of influenza
A infection when administered intranasally but displayed modest
activity when delivered by
the intraperitoneal route.