JE-2147: A dipeptide protease inhibitor (PI) that potently inhibits multi-PI-resistant HIV-1

Abstract
We designed, synthesized, and identified JE-2147, an allophenylnorstatine-containing dipeptide HIV protease inhibitor (PI), which is potent against a wide spectrum of HIV-1, HIV-2, simian immunodeficiency virus, and various clinical HIV-1 strains in vitro. Drug-resistant clinical HIV-1 strains, isolated from seven patients who had failed 9–11 different anti-HIV therapeutics after 32–83 months, had a variety of drug-resistance-related amino acid substitutions and were highly and invariably resistant to all of the currently available anti-HIV agents. JE-2147 was, however, extremely potent against all such drug-resistant strains, with IC50 values ranging from 13–41 nM (50 compared with that of wild-type HIV-1). The emergence of JE-2147-resistant HIV-1 variants in vitro was substantially delayed compared with that of HIV-1 resistant to another allophenylnorstatine-containing compound, KNI-272, and other related PIs. Structural analysis revealed that the presence of a flexible P2′ moiety is important for the potency of JE-2147 toward wild-type and mutant viruses. These data suggest that the use of flexible components may open a new avenue for designing PIs that resist the emergence of PI-resistant HIV-1. Further development of JE-2147 for treating patients harboring multi-PI-resistant HIV-1 is warranted.