Abstract
EFdA: A Very Excellent Anti-HIV Modified Nucleoside - From Design to the Current Clinical Results
Hiroshi Ohrui*
Corresponding Author: Hiroshi Ohrui, Yokohama University of Pharmacy, Japan
Revised: November 01, 2019;
Citation: Ohrui H. (2019) EFdA: A Very Excellent Anti-HIV Modified Nucleoside - From Design to the Current Clinical Results. Adv Nanomed Nanotechnol Res, 1(S1): 02.
Copyrights: ©2019 Ohrui H. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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EFdA (4’-Ethynly-2-Fluoro-2’-Deoxyadenosine) prevents the emergence of resistant HIV mutants and is over 400 times more active than AZT and several orders of magnitude more active than the other clinical reverse-transcriptase (RT) inhibitory 2’,3’-dideoxy nucleoside drugs, very low toxic, very long acting and very useful for prophylaxis. EFdA is now under clinical trials by Merck & Co. as MK-8591.

In the beginning of my talk, a general idea for the development of anti-viral modified nucleosides based on the mutation of viruses will be presented. Next, the development of EFdA is discussed and then the current results of the clinical trials of EFdA reported by Merck & CO. will be presented.

For the design of the modified nucleoside that could solve the critical problems of the clinical drugs (1. Emergence of drug-resistant HIV mutants; 2. Adverse effects by drugs; 3. Necessity to take considerable amount of drugs), four working hypotheses were proposed. They are: (1) the way to prevent the emergence of drug-resistant HIV mutants; (2) the way to decrease the toxicity of modified nucleosides; (3) the way to provide the modified nucleoside with the stability to both enzymatic and acidic cleavage of glycosyl linkage for long acting in the body; and (4) the difference of the substrate selectivity between RT and human DNA polymerases could make it possible to develop anti-HIV modified nucleosidex that is selectively active to HIV and very low toxic to human beings. 4’-Substituded-2’-Deoxynucleoside (4’SdN) which has 3’-OH was designed as the nucleoside that could satisfy these hypotheses.

The study on 4’SdN has successfully developed EFdA (modified at the two positions (2 and 4’) of the physiologic 2’-deoxyadenosine) having very excellent anti-HIV activity.