posted on 2016-02-21, 14:38authored byWieslaw M. Kazmierski, Robert Hamatake, Maosheng Duan, Lois L. Wright, Gary K. Smith, Richard
L. Jarvest, Jing-Jing Ji, Joel P. Cooper, Matthew D. Tallant, Renae M. Crosby, Katrina Creech, Amy Wang, Xianfeng Li, Suoming Zhang, Yong-Kang Zhang, Yang Liu, Charles Z. Ding, Yasheen Zhou, Jacob J. Plattner, Stephen J. Baker, Wei Bu, Liang Liu
The macrocyclic urea 2, a byproduct in the
synthesis
of benzoxaborole 1, was identified to be a novel and
potent HCV protease inhibitor. We further explored this motif by synthesizing
additional urea-based inhibitors and by characterizing them in replicase
HCV protease-resistant mutants assay. Several compounds, exemplified
by 12, were found to be more potent in HCV replicon assays
than leading second generation inhibitors such as danoprevir and TMC-435350.
Additionally, following oral administration, inhibitor 12 was found in rat liver in significantly higher concentrations than
those reported for both danoprevir and TMC-435350, suggesting that
inhibitor 12 has the combination of anti-HCV and pharmacokinetic
properties that warrants further development of this series.