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DOI: 10.1007/s11095-009-0013-1Pages: 259-263

Bifunctional Polymeric Inhibitors of Human Influenza A Viruses

1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Chemistry

2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

3. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Biology and the David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research

4. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Biological Engineering

Correspondence to:
Alexander Klibanov
Email: klibanov@mit.edu

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Abstract

Purpose

New antiviral agents were prepared by attaching derivatives of sialic acid (1) and of the drug zanamivir (2) to poly(isobutylene-alt-maleic anhydride) (poly-(1 + 2)) or by mixing poly-1 and poly-2, followed by assaying them against wild-type and drug-resistant influenza A Wuhan viruses.

Methods

Individually or together, 1 and 2 were covalently bonded to the polymer. The antiviral potencies of the resultant poly-1, poly-2, poly-(1 + 2), and poly-1 + poly-2, as well as 1 and 2, were assessed using plaque reduction assay.

Results

Attaching 1 to the polymer improved at best millimolar IC50 values over three orders of magnitude. While 2 exhibited micromolar IC50 values, poly-2 was >100-fold even more potent. The IC50 of poly-(1 + 2) against the wild-type strain was >300-fold and ∼17-fold better than of poly-1 and poly-2, respectively. In contrast, the potency of poly-(1 + 2) vs. poly-2 against the mutant strain merely doubled. The mixture of poly-1 + poly-2 inhibited both viral strains similarly to poly-2.

Conclusions

The bifunctional poly-(1 + 2) acts synergistically against the wild-type influenza virus, but not against its drug-resistant mutant, as compared to a physical mixture of the monofunctional poly-1 and poly-2.

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  • Accepted: Nov 12, 2009
  • OnlineDate: Dec 15, 2009

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