Synthesis of USC-093 and comparison with its promoiety enantiomer USC-093D against adenovirus in vitro and in a Syrian hamster model

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Abstract

Adenovirus infections of immunocompromised humans are a significant source of morbidity and mortality. At present, no drug has been approved by FDA for the treatment of adenovirus infections. A current treatment of such infections is off-label use of an antiviral acyclic nucleotide phosphonate, cidofovir (CDV, ( S )-HPMPC), which requires i.v. administration and has dose-limiting kidney toxicity. We recently reported that USC-093, a homoserinamide analogue of the tyrosinamide ( S )- HPMPA prodrug USC-087, was orally effective at a 10 mg/kg against disseminated human adenovirus infection (HAdV-C6) in a Syrian hamster model, although their efficacy was marginal after respiratory infection. Neither prodrug manifested GI toxicity. Unlike USC-087, USC-093 showed no significant nephrotoxicity at the effective dose. Here, we describe in detail the synthesis of USC-093 and also its D-homoserinamide analogue, USC-093D, in four steps (20-40% overall yield) starting from Boc-protected L-homoserine or D-homoserine lactone, respectively. The two stereoisomeric prodrugs had EC 50 30-70 nM vs. Ad5 or 1-6 nM vs. Ad6 in HFF cells, with USC-093D giving the lower values. The prodrugs were 30-59x more potent vs. Ad5 and 82-332x more potent than Ad6 relative to the positive control, CDV. To ascertain whether D-chirality in the promoiety could enhance the performance of the prodrug in vivo, USC-093D and USC-093 were compared in the Syrian hamster model (treated from day 1 q.d at an experimentally determined maximum tolerated oral dose of 20 mg/kg)). In this study, the hamsters were instilled i.n. with vehicle or 4X10 10 PFU/kg of HAdV-C6 to promote lung infection. Oral valganciclovir (VGCV) at 200 mg/kg b.i.d. was used as the positive control. The body weights were recorded daily, and at 3 days post challenge, gross pathological observation was performed. Lung samples were collected, and the virus burden was determined by TCID 50 assay. The results show that altering homoserine stereochemistry did not markedly improve the efficacy of the orally administered prodrug, consistent with the premise that its mechanism of transport is likely not dependent on stereoselective pathways, such as hPEPT1-mediated uptake.

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