Abstract

To improve the low water-solubility of HIV protease inhibitors, we synthesized water-soluble prodrugs of KNI-727, a potent small-sized dipeptide-type HIV-1 protease inhibitor consisting of an Apns-Dmt core (Apns; allophenylnorstatine, Dmt; (R)-5,5-dimethyl-1,3-thiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid) as inhibitory machinery. These prodrugs contained an O-acyl peptidomimetic structure with an ionized amino group leading to an increase in water-solubility, and were designed to regenerate the corresponding parent drugs based on the O→N intramolecular acyl migration reaction via a five-membered ring intermediate at the α-hydroxy-β-amino acid residue, that is Apns. The synthetic prodrug 3a improved the water-solubility (13 mg/mL) more than 8000-fold in comparison with the parent compound, which is the practically acceptable value as water-soluble drug. Furthermore, to understand the structural effects of the O-acyl moiety on the migration rate, we evaluated several phenylacetyl-type and benzoyl-type prodrugs. These prodrugs were stable as an HCl salt and in a strongly acidic solution corresponding to gastric juice (pH 2.0), and could be converted to the parent compounds promptly under aqueous conditions from slightly acidic to basic pH at 37°C.

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