1. Academic Validation
  2. Preclinical characterization of GLS4, an inhibitor of hepatitis B virus core particle assembly

Preclinical characterization of GLS4, an inhibitor of hepatitis B virus core particle assembly

  • Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2013 Nov;57(11):5344-54. doi: 10.1128/AAC.01091-13.
Guoyi Wu 1 Bo Liu Yingjun Zhang Jing Li Alla Arzumanyan Marcia M Clayton Raymond F Schinazi Zhaohe Wang Siegfried Goldmann Qingyun Ren Faxhou Zhang Mark A Feitelson
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biology, College of Science and Technology, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Abstract

Hepatitis B virus (HBV)-associated chronic liver diseases are treated with nucleoside analogs that target the virus polymerase. While these analogs are potent, drugs are needed to target other virus-encoded gene products to better block the virus replication cycle and chronic liver disease. This work further characterized GLS4 and compared it to the related BAY 41-4109, both of which trigger aberrant HBV core particle assembly, where the virus replication cycle occurs. This was done in HepAD38 cells, which replicate HBV to high levels. In vitro, GLS4 was significantly less toxic for primary human hepatocytes (P < 0.01 up to 100 μM), inhibited virus accumulation in the supernantant of HepAD38 cells (P < 0.02 up to 100 nM), inhibited HBV replicative forms in the liver with a significantly lower 50% effective concentration (EC50) (P < 0.02), and more strongly inhibited core gene expression (P < 0.001 at 100 to 200 nM) compared to BAY 41-4109. In vivo characterization was performed in nude mice inoculated with HepAD38 cells, which grew out as tumors, resulting in viremia. Treatment of mice with GLS4 and BAY 41-4109 showed strong and sustained suppression of virus DNA to about the same extents both during and after treatment. Both drugs reduced the levels of intracellular core antigen in the tumors. Alanine aminotransferase levels were normal. Tumor and total body weights were not affected by treatment. Thus, GLS4 was as potent as the prototype, BAY 41-4109, and was superior to lamivudine, in that there was little virus relapse after the end of treatment and no indication of toxicity.

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