Abstract

2'-Deoxy-2'-β-fluoroadenosines bearing 4'-azido or 4'-ethynyl groups designed for the treatment of HIV-1 infection have been synthesized. All these compounds possess nanomolar anti-HIV-1 activity, with the 4'-ethynyl-2-fluoroadenosine analog 1c (CL-197) being the most potent compound with low cytotoxicity (EC50 = 0.9 nM, CC50 > 100 μM). It also shows potent inhibitory activities on drug resistant and clinical HIV-1 strains. Oral administration of 1c to Beagle dogs resulted in high levels of its bioactive form 1c-TP in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, the HIV-1 target cells, where the resulting triphosphate exhibited a long-term intracellular retention and could prevent HIV-1 infection for an extended time. 1c displayed low in vivo toxicity and favorable pharmacokinetics profiles in Sprague-Dawley rats. The preclinical data support further development of 1c as a highly potent and orally bioavailable clinical candidate to treat HIV-1 infection. Currently, CL-197 is in clinical trials in China (registration number: CXHL2200529).

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