Structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity

Background: Topical microbicides, used by women to prevent the transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections are urgently required. Dendrimers are highly branched nanoparticles being developed as microbicides. However, the anti-HIV and HSV structure-activity relationship of dendrimer...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tyssen, D., Henderson, S., Johnson, A., Sterjovski, J., Moore, K., La, J., Zanin, M., Sonza, S., Karellas, P., Giannis, M., Krippner, G., Wesselingh, S., McCarthy, T., Gorry, P., Ramsland, Paul, Cone, R., Paull, J., Lewis, G., Tachedjian, G.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Public Library of Science 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47341
_version_ 1848757806422818816
author Tyssen, D.
Henderson, S.
Johnson, A.
Sterjovski, J.
Moore, K.
La, J.
Zanin, M.
Sonza, S.
Karellas, P.
Giannis, M.
Krippner, G.
Wesselingh, S.
McCarthy, T.
Gorry, P.
Ramsland, Paul
Cone, R.
Paull, J.
Lewis, G.
Tachedjian, G.
author_facet Tyssen, D.
Henderson, S.
Johnson, A.
Sterjovski, J.
Moore, K.
La, J.
Zanin, M.
Sonza, S.
Karellas, P.
Giannis, M.
Krippner, G.
Wesselingh, S.
McCarthy, T.
Gorry, P.
Ramsland, Paul
Cone, R.
Paull, J.
Lewis, G.
Tachedjian, G.
author_sort Tyssen, D.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: Topical microbicides, used by women to prevent the transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections are urgently required. Dendrimers are highly branched nanoparticles being developed as microbicides. However, the anti-HIV and HSV structure-activity relationship of dendrimers comprising benzyhydryl amide cores and lysine branches, and a comprehensive analysis of their broad-spectrum anti-HIV activity and mechanism of action have not been published. Methods and Findings: Dendrimers with optimized activity against HIV-1 and HSV-2 were identified with respect to the number of lysine branches (generations) and surface groups. Antiviral activity was determined in cell culture assays. Timeof- addition assays were performed to determine dendrimer mechanism of action. In vivo toxicity and HSV-2 inhibitory activity were evaluated in the mouse HSV-2 susceptibility model. Surface groups imparting the most potent inhibitory activity against HIV-1 and HSV-2 were naphthalene disulfonic acid (DNAA) and 3,5-disulfobenzoic acid exhibiting the greatest anionic charge and hydrophobicity of the seven surface groups tested. Their anti-HIV-1 activity did not appreciably increase beyond a second-generation dendrimer while dendrimers larger than two generations were required for potent anti-HSV-2 activity. Second (SPL7115) and fourth generation (SPL7013) DNAA dendrimers demonstrated broad-spectrum anti-HIV activity. However, SPL7013 was more active against HSV and blocking HIV-1 envelope mediated cell-to-cell fusion. SPL7013 and SPL7115 inhibited viral entry with similar potency against CXCR4-(X4) and CCR5-using (R5) HIV-1 strains. SPL7013 was not toxic and provided at least 12 h protection against HSV-2 in the mouse vagina. Conclusions: Dendrimers can be engineered with optimized potency against HIV and HSV representing a unique platform for the controlled synthesis of chemically defined multivalent agents as viral entry inhibitors. SPL7013 is formulated as VivaGelH and is currently in clinical development to provide protection against HIV and HSV. SPL7013 could also be combined with other microbicides. © 2010 Tyssen et al.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:33:57Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-47341
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:33:57Z
publishDate 2010
publisher Public Library of Science
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-473412017-09-13T14:13:04Z Structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity Tyssen, D. Henderson, S. Johnson, A. Sterjovski, J. Moore, K. La, J. Zanin, M. Sonza, S. Karellas, P. Giannis, M. Krippner, G. Wesselingh, S. McCarthy, T. Gorry, P. Ramsland, Paul Cone, R. Paull, J. Lewis, G. Tachedjian, G. Background: Topical microbicides, used by women to prevent the transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections are urgently required. Dendrimers are highly branched nanoparticles being developed as microbicides. However, the anti-HIV and HSV structure-activity relationship of dendrimers comprising benzyhydryl amide cores and lysine branches, and a comprehensive analysis of their broad-spectrum anti-HIV activity and mechanism of action have not been published. Methods and Findings: Dendrimers with optimized activity against HIV-1 and HSV-2 were identified with respect to the number of lysine branches (generations) and surface groups. Antiviral activity was determined in cell culture assays. Timeof- addition assays were performed to determine dendrimer mechanism of action. In vivo toxicity and HSV-2 inhibitory activity were evaluated in the mouse HSV-2 susceptibility model. Surface groups imparting the most potent inhibitory activity against HIV-1 and HSV-2 were naphthalene disulfonic acid (DNAA) and 3,5-disulfobenzoic acid exhibiting the greatest anionic charge and hydrophobicity of the seven surface groups tested. Their anti-HIV-1 activity did not appreciably increase beyond a second-generation dendrimer while dendrimers larger than two generations were required for potent anti-HSV-2 activity. Second (SPL7115) and fourth generation (SPL7013) DNAA dendrimers demonstrated broad-spectrum anti-HIV activity. However, SPL7013 was more active against HSV and blocking HIV-1 envelope mediated cell-to-cell fusion. SPL7013 and SPL7115 inhibited viral entry with similar potency against CXCR4-(X4) and CCR5-using (R5) HIV-1 strains. SPL7013 was not toxic and provided at least 12 h protection against HSV-2 in the mouse vagina. Conclusions: Dendrimers can be engineered with optimized potency against HIV and HSV representing a unique platform for the controlled synthesis of chemically defined multivalent agents as viral entry inhibitors. SPL7013 is formulated as VivaGelH and is currently in clinical development to provide protection against HIV and HSV. SPL7013 could also be combined with other microbicides. © 2010 Tyssen et al. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47341 10.1371/journal.pone.0012309 Public Library of Science unknown
spellingShingle Tyssen, D.
Henderson, S.
Johnson, A.
Sterjovski, J.
Moore, K.
La, J.
Zanin, M.
Sonza, S.
Karellas, P.
Giannis, M.
Krippner, G.
Wesselingh, S.
McCarthy, T.
Gorry, P.
Ramsland, Paul
Cone, R.
Paull, J.
Lewis, G.
Tachedjian, G.
Structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity
title Structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity
title_full Structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity
title_fullStr Structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity
title_full_unstemmed Structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity
title_short Structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity
title_sort structure activity relationship of dendrimer microbicides with dual action antiviral activity
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47341