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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 1998, p. 3200-3208, Vol. 42, No. 12
0066-4804/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
In Vitro Inhibition of Hepadnavirus Polymerases by
the Triphosphates of BMS-200475 and Lobucavir
Maria
Seifer,
Robert K.
Hamatake,
Richard J.
Colonno, and
David N.
Standring*
Pharmaceutical Research Institute,
Bristol-Myers Squibb, Wallingford, Connecticut 06492
Received 3 February 1998/Returned for modification 1 May
1998/Accepted 15 September 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
The guanosine analogs BMS-200475 and lobucavir have previously been
shown to effectively suppress propagation of the human hepatitis B
virus (HBV) and woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) in 2.2.15 liver cells
and in the woodchuck animal model system, respectively. This repression
was presumed to occur via inhibition of the viral polymerase (Pol) by
the triphosphate (TP) forms of BMS-200475 and lobucavir which are
both produced in mammalian cells. To determine the exact mode of
action, BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP, along with several other
guanosine analog-TPs and lamivudine-TP were tested against the HBV,
WHV, and duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) polymerases in vitro.
Estimates of the 50% inhibitory concentrations revealed that
BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP inhibited HBV, WHV, and DHBV Pol
comparably and were superior to the other nucleoside-TPs tested. More
importantly, both analogs blocked the three distinct phases of
hepadnaviral replication: priming, reverse transcription, and
DNA-dependent DNA synthesis. These data suggest that the modest potency
of lobucavir in 2.2.15 cells may be the result of poor phosphorylation
in vivo. Kinetic studies revealed that BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP
competitively inhibit HBV Pol and WHV Pol with respect to the
natural dGTP substrate and that both drugs appear to bind to Pol with
very high affinities. Endogenous sequencing reactions
conducted in replicative HBV nucleocapsids suggested that
BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP are nonobligate chain terminators that
stall Pol at sites that are distinct yet characteristically two to
three residues downstream from dG incorporation sites.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Human hepatitis B virus (HBV), the
prototype member of a small family of related hepadnaviruses, remains a
major agent of liver infection and a cause of liver disease throughout
the world. Although the majority of HBV infections are acute in nature
and clinically resolve within 6 months, the chronic persistent HBV infection seen in some 5 to 10% of acutely infected individuals places
them at greatly increased risk of liver disease, including cirrhosis
and hepatocellular carcinoma (1).
Current efforts to break the cycle of persistent HBV infection have
mostly centered on nucleoside analogs as inhibitors of the
multifunctional viral polymerase (Pol) (14), the key
enzyme in the unique hepadnaviral replication scheme. Pol
converts a greater-than-genome-length, plus-strand pregenomic RNA
(pgRNA) into the partially double-stranded circular DNA genome
via a multistep process (11, 23, 33). The first and most
remarkable step is a discrete priming reaction (45) in which
a specific tyrosine residue of Pol, located in an N-terminal priming
domain, acts as the acceptor for the initiating deoxynucleotide
residue, usually a dGTP (20, 21, 50). Priming is
templated by a bulge sequence in the stem-loop structure (epsilon
or
) (27, 41) on the pgRNA and results in a short
DNA oligomer which is covalently linked to Pol. The next step is marked
by translocation of the Pol-DNA adduct to a complementary sequence
found in the DR1 element at the 3' end of pgRNA (27, 41,
45), followed by the elongation of minus-strand DNA via
RNA-dependent DNA synthesis (reverse transcription [RT])
(39). Finally, Pol also mediates DNA-dependent plus-strand DNA synthesis which is primed by an RNA primer (22)
resulting from incomplete degradation of pgRNA by an RNase H activity
at the carboxyl terminus of Pol (30).
BMS-200475 is a cyclopentyl guanine with an exo carbon-carbon double
bond (2, 37). BMS-200475 has been shown to be an effective
(50% effective concentration [EC50], 3.8 ± 1.4 nM)
and selective (selectivity index, ~8,000) inhibitor of HBV
replication in cultured 2.2.15 liver cells (17).
Furthermore, BMS-200475 exhibits excellent efficacy against woodchuck
hepatitis virus (WHV) in chronically infected carrier woodchucks at
oral dosages as low as 0.02 mg/kg of body weight/day
(13). The cyclobutyl guanine (9) lobucavir,
formerly designated BMS-180194, exhibits a broad antiviral
spectrum including antihepadnaviral activity in 2.2.15 cells
(EC50, 2.5 ± 0.85 µM) (17) as well as in
WHV-infected woodchucks (4).
Inhibition of hepadnaviral replication is presumed to occur through the
triphosphate (TP) forms of BMS-200475 and lobucavir, with both
nucleosides being converted to their respective TP forms in mammalian
cells by cellular enzymes. In this report, we used three distinct in
vitro Pol assays to determine the mechanism of inhibition of HBV
polymerase activity by BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP. The results
revealed that the TP forms of both guanosine analogs are similarly
potent in inhibiting HBV, WHV, and duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) Pol in
vitro and that they effectively block all three replication steps.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Compounds.
The following compounds were chemically
synthesized at Bristol-Myers Squibb: BMS-200475, formerly
SQ-34676
{[1S-(1
,3
,4
)]-2-amino- 1,9-dihydro-9-[4-hydroxy-3-(hydroxymethyl)-2-methylenecyclopentyl]-6H-purin-6-one monohydrate}; lobucavir, formerly cyclobut G or BMS-180194
{(1R)-(1
,2
,3
)-[2,3-bis(hydroxymethyl)cyclobutyl]guanine}; SQ-32829 or (±)-HHCG
{(±)-(1
,2
,3
)-9-[2-hydroxy-3-(hydroxymethyl)cyclobutyl]guanine} (18, 44); acyclovir [ACV;
9-(2-hydroxyethoxymethyl)-guanine]; ganciclovir [GCV;
9-(1,3-dihydroxy-2-propoxymethyl)-guanine]; and lamivudine (3TC;
(
)-
-L-2',3'-dideoxy-3'-thiacytidine]. The TP
forms of BMS-200475, ACV (43), and 3TC were synthesized
chemically; lobucavir-TP, SQ-32829-TP, and GCV-TP were prepared
enzymatically by using herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase
essentially as described previously (44). Other
deoxynucleoside-TPs (dNTPs) and 2',3'-dideoxynucleoside-TPs (ddNTPs)
were purchased from Pharmacia (Piscataway, N.J.).
The structures of the corresponding nucleoside moieties of all seven
TPs tested are depicted in Fig. 1.
BMS-200475 (2) is structurally similar to 2'-deoxyguanosine
except for the exo carbon-carbon double bond replacing the natural
furanose oxygen and inhibits HBV replication, with an EC50
of 3.8 ± 1.4 nM in cultured 2.2.15 liver cells (17).
Lobucavir (9), which bears a cyclobutyl replacement for the
sugar moiety, has an EC50 of 2.5 ± 0.85 µM against
HBV (17) and is also active against herpesviruses (48). The dC analog 3TC exhibits EC50s of 60 to
116 nM against HBV in cultured cells (17, 19) and is
effective in the clinical setting of HBV infection (8, 28).
The well-known antiherpesvirus drugs ACV and GCV are guanosine analogs
with acyclic sugars. GCV reportedly inhibits DHBV replication in
primary duck hepatocytes with an EC50 of 2.5 µM
(3), while ACV has only modest activity against HBV in vitro
(19): both compounds have been used against HBV in animal
models (7, 42) and humans (12, 32). ddG is active
against HBV in cultured cells, with a reported EC50 of 2.3 µM (19), and its TP form selectively inhibits DHBV Pol (16). SQ-32829 (18) has activity against
herpesviruses (44) but has not been previously tested
against HBV; it was included in this study because of its close
structural similarity to lobucavir (they differ only in a hydroxyl
group rather than a hydroxymethyl group at the 2' position of the sugar
ring), which should provide insight into the specificity of the
interaction with hepadnaviral Pols.
Pol assays and IC50 determinations.
Three in
vitro assays were used to measure separately the priming, RT, and
DNA-dependent DNA polymerization activities of hepadnaviral Pols.
Mammalian hepadnaviral Pols were assayed by an endogenous Pol assay
(EPA) that measures the Pol activity within virions or viral
nucleocapsids (25). Concentrated WHV virions, partially
freed of serum components, were derived from the sera of chronically
infected woodchucks purchased from Marmotech (Cortland, N.Y.). The sera
were thawed and clarified (20 min, 10,000 × g, 4°C),
and the virus particles were pelleted through 25% (wt/vol) sucrose-TNE (10 mM Tris hydrochloride [pH 7.4], 160 mM NaCl, 1 mM
EDTA) plus 0.75% Triton X-100 in a tabletop ultracentrifuge (TLA100.3
rotor; 550,000 × g, 1 h, 4°C). The virions were
resuspended in TNE at 1/10 of the original serum volume. In a standard
in vitro EPA (see below), these virions conduct a late-stage
hepadnaviral replication reaction that reflects the synthesis of
second-strand DNA (6). Recombinant human HBV nucleocapsids
harboring an active HBV Pol were generated as described previously
(35). Briefly, these nucleocapsids are obtained by
expressing the HBV core and Pol proteins in trans in SF9 or
SF21 insect cells via two distinct baculovirus vectors. Replicative
nucleocapsids were purified to >80% purity by ultracentrifugation
procedures following mild protease and nuclease treatment. In a
standard EPA (see below), these nucleocapsids undergo mostly the
earliest phases of the HBV replication reaction, namely, the priming
step and the RT of first-strand HBV DNA (35).
Gel-based 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50)
determinations were performed with 2-µl aliquots of 10×-concentrated
WHV virions (equal to 20 µl of serum) and approximately 1 µg of
immunocomplexed HBV nucleocapsids, respectively, per reaction mixture.
The latter were immunoprecipitated from infected insect cell lysates as
described recently (35).
For standard EPAs (35), WHV virions or immunocomplexed HBV
capsids were resuspended in 50 µl of EPA buffer (50 mM Tris
hydrochloride [pH 7.4], 75 mM NH4Cl, 1 mM EDTA, 20 mM
MgCl2, 0.1 mM
-mercaptoethanol, 0.5% Tween 20)
supplemented with 50 µM (or in some reactions 12.5 µM) unlabeled
dNTPs (dGTP, dCTP, and TTP) and 33 nM [
-32P]dATP
(3,000 Ci/mmol; NEN-Dupont, Boston, Mass.). Following incubation at
37°C for 12 to 16 h (WHV) and 6 h (HBV), respectively,
endogenously labeled DNA products were extracted as described
previously (35) and were then analyzed by gel
electrophoresis. Double-stranded WHV genomes were resolved on 1%
agarose gels in TBE (90 mM Tris [pH 8.0], 90 mM borate, 0.1 mM EDTA).
Covalently linked minus-strand HBV RT products were analyzed by sodium
dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). The
products were visualized by autoradiography following fixation and
drying of the gels. For determination of IC50s, the dried
gels were scanned on a phosphorimager (Storm 860; Molecular Dynamics,
Sunnyvale, Calif.) prior to data evaluation with Imagequant software
(Molecular Dynamics). 35S-labeled, in vitro-translated HBV
Pol was run as a reference.
The in vitro priming activity of DHBV Pol was assayed by the method of
Wang and Seeger (46). DHBV Pol was expressed from a
full-length DHBV pgRNA-like transcript (15) generated in a coupled in vitro transcription-translation system (TNT-SP6; Promega, Madison, Wis.). The translation reaction (12.5 µl) contained 250 ng
of plasmid pSP65-D (kindly provided by Jesse Summers, Alberquerque, N.M.) and was incubated for 2 h at 30°C. Subsequently, the
priming reaction was carried out for 30 min at 30°C in a 25-µl
reaction volume containing 250 nM [
-32P]dGTP (3,000 Ci/mmol; NEN-Dupont) and unlabeled dCTP, dATP, and TTP each at a
concentration of 220 nM; even in the presence of all four
deoxynucleotides the predominant outcome of this assay is a limited
priming reaction (data not shown; see Results). Aliquots (1.5 µl)
were resolved on SDS-8% polyacrylamide gels. The fixed and dried gels
were visualized, scanned, and quantitated as described above.
As an alternative to gel-based assays, a plate-format assay (see below)
was used to obtain inhibition data for the mammalian hepadnaviral
polymerase preparations. The IC50s presented in this report
are expressed in the form of the ratio of drug concentration: concentration of natural substrate that is required to give 50% activity relative to the activities of the no-drug controls.
Kinetics.
For kinetic studies (34), resuspended
WHV virions or HBV nucleocapsids were subjected to EPAs adapted to a
96-well plate format. All reactions were performed in triplicate. A
typical assay was run for 2 h at 30°C and contained (per well)
75 mM NH4Cl, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), 20 mM
MgCl2, 0.1% Tween 20, 100 µg of bovine serum albumin per
ml, 200 µg of tRNA per ml, and either ~500 ng of
baculovirus-expressed HBV nucleocapsids or 2 µl of 10×-concentrated
WHV virions (equal to 20 µl of serum) in a final volume of 20 µl.
Deoxynucleotides and inhibitors were added as outlined below. Reactions
were terminated with 25 µl of chilled 20% trichloroacetic acid
(TCA)-2% sodium pyrophosphate. Following 15 min of incubation on ice,
precipitates were collected on glass-fiber-filter plates (Unifilter 96;
Packard Instruments, Meriden, Conn.), washed extensively with water and
then ethanol, and quantified by liquid scintillation counting
(Topcount; Packard Instruments).
For competitive inhibition studies the WHV TCA plate assay included
eight dilutions of [
-33P]dGTP (125 to 5.55 nM; 2,000 Ci/mmol; NEN-Dupont); unlabeled dATP, dCTP, and TTP at concentrations
of 5 µM each; and 0, 0.5, 2, 5, or 10 nM BMS-200475-TP or
lobucavir-TP. The HBV TCA plate assay included eight dilutions of
[
-33P]dGTP (167 to 5 nM); unlabeled dATP, dCTP, and
TTP at concentrations of 5 µM each; and BMS-200475-TP or
lobucavir-TP at 0, 0.5, 2, 5, or 10 nM. The Kis
of BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP were obtained by plotting the analog
concentrations against the slopes calculated from double-reciprocal
graphs of 1/V (where V is the reaction rate)
versus 1/S (where S is the substrate
concentration) at each drug concentration (Lineweaver-Burk plots).
Alternatively, Kis of BMS-200475-TP,
lobucavir-TP, and 3TC-TP against WHV and HBV Pols were determined from
independent measurements of (i) the Km of the
natural substrates (dGTP and dCTP) and (ii) the IC50s of
the analogs (BMS-200475-TP, lobucavir-TP, and 3TC-TP). Km determinations included eight dilutions of
[
-33P]dGTP or [
-33P]dCTP (250 to 7.81 nM); the IC50 assays used eight dilutions of BMS-200475-TP
(1,000 to 0.3 nM) at 33 nM [33P]dGTP, eight dilutions of
lobucavir-TP (6.67 to 0.052 nM) at 2.5 nM [33P]dGTP, or
eight dilutions of 3TC-TP (1000 to 1 nM) at 22.75 nM [33P]dCTP. The Ki was then
calculated by the equation Ki = IC50/(1 + S/Km).
Endogenous sequencing.
Endogenous sequencing reactions were
performed as described by Molnar-Kimber et al. (26), with
the following modifications: purified baculovirus-expressed HBV
nucleocapsids (10 µg per 100-µl reaction mixture) replaced DHBV
capsids, and the reaction mixtures were incubated for 3 h at
37°C and included the four
-32P-labeled dNTPs (800 Ci/mmol; NEN-Dupont) at concentrations of 130 nM each and either one of
the four ddNTPs (26 µM) or else BMS-200475-TP or lobucavir-TP at 2 and 10 µM, respectively. Unincorporated radiolabeled dNTPs were
removed by pelleting the capsids through an equal volume of 25%
(wt/vol) sucrose in TNE plus 0.75% Triton X-100 in a TLA100.1
fixed-angle rotor for 1.5 h at 550,000 × g and
4°C with a tabletop TL 100 ultracentrifuge (Beckman Instruments, Fullerton, Calif.). Pellets were resuspended in 10 µl of TE
(Tris-EDTA)-0.1% SDS and were then digested with 0.2 mg of proteinase
K (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, Ind.) per ml for 45 min at
37°C. Half of each sample was electrophoresed through a denaturing
6% polyacrylamide gel containing 8 M urea in TBE. The
incorporated radioactivity was visualized by scanning the dried
gel with a phosphorimager (Molecular Dynamics).
 |
RESULTS |
Inhibition of hepadnaviral Pols in vitro.
An initial set of
experiments examined the inhibition of different hepadnaviral Pols and
discrete hepadnaviral replication steps by the TP forms of BMS-200475
and lobucavir. For comparison purposes, this analysis also included
five other nucleoside-TPs, four guanosine analogs and a single dC
derivative, which were selected on the basis of either their activity
against hepadnavirus Pols or structural considerations.
To determine whether the TPs of these nucleoside analogs were capable
of inhibiting hepadnaviral Pols, we initially titrated the selected
nucleoside analog-TPs against the HBV, WHV, and DHBV Pols in three
different in vitro assays which measure the three replication steps of
priming, RT, and plus-strand DNA synthesis. Because these three systems
require widely different concentrations of dNTPs, the analog-TP
concentration-to-natural dNTP substrate concentration ratio provides a
more meaningful comparison between the different systems than does the
actual inhibitor concentration.
In representative drug titration experiments (Fig.
2), HBV Pol was assayed in the context of
recently described baculovirus-derived replicative HBV cores
(35) which yield abundant Pol-linked, 32P-labeled HBV minus-strand DNA in a standard endogenous
Pol reaction. To facilitate a fair comparison between G and C analogs,
[
-32P]dATP was used as the label and the drug was
titrated against the unlabeled dGTP substrate for the G analogs or
against dCTP for 3TC (the unlabeled substrate was typically present in
the assay at 12.5 to 50 µM). The Pol-linked species were disclosed by
SDS-PAGE and autoradiography (Fig. 2A) and were quantitated by
phosphorimaging of the gels (Fig. 2B). BMS-200475-TP reduced the
production of Pol-linked products in a dose-dependent manner, eliminating 50% of the products at a BMS-200475-TP
concentration-to-dGTP substrate concentration ratio of 0.2 and
essentially all products at a ratio of 8. Since lobucavir-TP is
inherently difficult to synthesize, there was too little of this
material to titrate in the gel-based assay; however, when it was
titrated in the modified HBV TCA plate assay its inhibitory profile
appeared to be comparable to that of BMS-200475-TP (see Table 1).
3TC-TP was the next most effective HBV Pol inhibitor, reducing DNA
synthesis by 50% at an inhibitor concentration-to-substrate
concentration ratio of ~2, followed by ACV-TP and GCV-TP which
inhibited synthesis by 50% when present at an approximately sixfold
excess over the amount of substrate present. However, whereas ACV-TP
and GCV-TP appeared to eliminate all Pol-linked species uniformly, some
smaller-product species clearly escaped inhibition by an eightfold
excess of 3TC-TP (see below). For SQ-32829-TP, a high molar excess
(>10) was required to inhibit Pol activity significantly, and a
20-fold excess of drug again left a distinctive tight band of small
Pol-linked DNA products; these presumably reflect species generated in
the discrete priming reaction which is apparently not inhibited by
certain nucleoside-TPs (see below). ddGTP was largely inactive against HBV Pol (see Table 1).

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FIG. 2.
Inhibitory effects of nucleoside analogs on HBV
Pol-mediated viral minus-strand DNA synthesis. Recombinant HBV
nucleocapsids were subjected to endogenous Pol assays in the presence
of increasing (from left to right) concentrations of dG analog TPs or
the dC analog 3TC-TP and constant concentrations of cold dNTPs and
[ -32P]dATP. (A) The radiolabeled Pol-linked
minus-strand DNA products were extracted and analyzed through SDS-8%
polyacrylamide gels. The position of HBV Pol (~93 kDa) is indicated
at the sides of the figure; an in vitro-translated
35S-labeled Pol marker is shown in lane 35S
(authentic 93-kDa HBV Pol is the second largest species in this lane).
Substr., substrate. (B) Inhibition curves were generated by
phosphorimaging of the gels shown in panel A.
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The inhibitory effects of representative analog-TPs on WHV Pol was
measured via EPAs conducted with serum-derived WHV virions. Mature
hepadnaviruses house largely completed linear and relaxed circular
double-stranded DNA species (47). Thus, upon the addition of
exogenous dNTPs in vitro, the encapsidated WHV Pol conducts only a
limited DNA-dependent plus-strand DNA synthesis (6). Following deproteinization, these 32P-labeled genomic DNA
species can readily be visualized by agarose gel electrophoresis and
autoradiography (Fig. 3A) and can be
quantitated by phosphorimaging (Fig. 3B). The titration curves revealed
BMS-200475-TP to be a very potent inhibitor of WHV second-strand
synthesis, with 50% inhibition attained at a very low drug
concentration-to-substrate concentration ratio of ~0.08. The
inhibitory profile of lobucavir-TP against WHV Pol was very similar to
that of BMS-200475-TP, as determined by the plate assay method (data
not shown; see below). 3TC-TP was more active than SQ-32829-TP or
GCV-TP against WHV Pol, but 3TC-TP was still some six- to sevenfold
less potent than BMS-200475-TP.

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FIG. 3.
Inhibitory effect of select nucleoside analogs on WHV
Pol-dependent viral plus-strand DNA synthesis. (A) Partially purified
virions from the serum of a woodchuck with chronic WHV infection were
used to conduct endogenous Pol reactions with various amounts of
guanosine-TPs or cytosine-TPs, as indicated at the top, and
constant concentrations of cold dNTPs and [ -32P]dATP.
The characteristic double-stranded linear (ds) and relaxed circular
(rc) DNA species were isolated, resolved on 1% agarose gels, and
imaged by autoradiography. Substr., substrate. (B) Inhibition curves
generated by phosphorimaging analysis of the gels in panel A.
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The inhibitory effects of the TP analogs against the priming reaction
of DHBV Pol (Fig. 4) was monitored in an
in vitro translation-priming system (46, 49, 50). Priming
was conducted in the presence of comparable concentrations of all four
deoxynucleotides (including the [
-32P]dGTP label) as
described in Materials and Methods. DHBV Pol activity largely
remained limited to a discrete priming reaction under these
conditions which allow the different inhibitors to be more fairly
compared. The covalently protein-linked DHBV oligonucleotide-primer products (Pol-GTAA) were analyzed by SDS-8% PAGE (Fig. 4A).
Phosphorimaging of the gels (Fig. 4B) revealed that BMS-200475-TP and
lobucavir-TP are similarly effective against the dGTP-based priming
reaction, giving 50% inhibition at drug concentration-to-substrate
concentration ratios of ~0.1. The remaining guanosine-TP analogs were
inhibitory only when present in a 100- to 500-fold excess over the
amount of dGTP substrate present. 3TC-TP had no effect on a priming
reaction even at a drug concentration-to-substrate concentration ratio of 500.

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FIG. 4.
Effect of guanosine versus cytosine analogs on DHBV
priming. In vitro-translated DHBV Pol was incubated with 250 nM
[ -32P]dGTP; 220 nM unlabeled dCTP, dATP, and TTP; and
increasing concentrations of the indicated analog-TPs. (A) The
radiolabeled Pol-oligonucleotide adducts were analyzed by conventional
SDS-PAGE and autoradiography. The migration positions of the
35S-labeled DHBV Pol (lane 35S) are indicated
at the sides. Substr., substrate. (B) Titration curves were generated
by phosphorimaging.
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A more quantitative and comprehensive summary of the effects of the
nucleoside-TPs on the three hepadnaviral Pols as well as on the three
distinct replication steps is presented in Table 1. The IC50s presented are
again expressed as ratios of drug-to-natural substrate (dGTP and dCTP,
respectively) and represent the mean values and standard deviations
obtained from eight independent BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP
titration experiments. The data are derived from both plate- and
gel-based assays for BMS-200475-TP and plate-based assays only for
lobucavir-TP; the two formats gave very comparable results (data not
shown). The remaining compounds were typically assayed in at least two
experiments, the results of which were averaged. It is apparent
from the uniformly low IC50s of ~0.3 seen across the
first two rows of Table 1 that BMS-200475-TP and
lobucavir-TP are remarkably similar (i) in inhibiting the three Pol
species (HBV, WHV, DHBV) and, more importantly, (ii) in
suppressing all three distinct replication reactions: priming, RT
of viral minus strand, and plus-strand DNA synthesis. The fractional
inhibitor concentration-to-substrate concentration ratios required to
elicit a 50% reduction in Pol activity further imply that the analogs
bind to Pol better than the natural substrate does, and this is
supported by their low Kis (see below). In
contrast, SQ-32829-TP, GCV-TP, ACV-TP, ddG-TP, and 3TC-TP
showed negligible activity against DHBV priming, were 5- to
25-fold less active than BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP
against WHV plus-strand DNA synthesis, and were 15- to 150-fold less
active against HBV Pol-mediated minus-strand DNA polymerization.
The preceding data established that BMS-200475-TP inhibits the DHBV
priming reaction, while 3TC-TP does not (Fig. 4). This is consistent
with the idea that dCTP cannot be incorporated into the DHBV primer
(GTAA) (5, 46) or the HBV primer (GAA or TGAA) (21,
35). This difference between BMS-200475 and 3TC was further
tested by conducting in vitro EPA reactions with the recombinant HBV
Pol-bearing preparations that are competent for both priming and
minus-strand DNA elongation. HBV nucleocapsids were exposed to no
drug, to 50 µM BMS-200475-TP, or to 250 µM 3TC-TP; these
high concentrations were used to ensure that both drugs exerted their
maximal suppressive effects. As is apparent from the gel profile (Fig.
5), BMS-200475-TP uniformly suppressed priming and the minus-strand DNA elongation activities of HBV Pol.
In contrast, the inhibitory effect of 3TC-TP appeared to be restricted
to the blocking of RT, leaving the priming reaction intact, as
evidenced by the tight band of Pol adducts with the approximate size of
the 35S-labeled HBV Pol standard (93 kDa). 3TC appears very
similar in this regard to phosphonoformic acid, a known inhibitor of
hepadnavirus elongation (24) but not priming (21,
35, 46).

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FIG. 5.
Effect of BMS-200475-TP versus 3TC-TP on the HBV
priming and reverse transcription activities. Cores were subjected
to endogenous Pol reactions in the presence of 50 µM BMS-200475-TP
or 250 µM 3TC-TP. The product pattern generated in the absence of
drug (lane Control) is shown for comparison. In vitro-translated
[35S]-labeled HBV pol (p93) served as size marker.
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Kinetic studies of inhibition.
To further explore the
mechanism of action of lobucavir-TP and BMS-200475-TP, we next turned
to some basic enzyme kinetics (34) using microtiter
plate-adapted versions of both the WHV virion and replicative HBV
nucleocapsid Pol assay systems (Fig. 6).
This assay measures the level of incorporation of
-33P-labeled dGTP into TCA-precipitable DNA (see
Materials and Methods).

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FIG. 6.
Kinetic analyses of dGTP, BMS-200475-TP, and
lobucavir-TP using WHV and HBV Pols. Lineweaver-Burk plots indicate
that lobucavir-TP (A) and BMS-200475-TP (B) are competitive inhibitors
of dGTP for WHV Pol (A) and HBV Pol (B). The velocities of the Pol
reactions were measured as femtomoles of [ -33P]dGMP
incorporation in 120 min at 30°C. (C) Double-reciprocal plot to
determine the Km of dGTP with HBV Pol. The
reaction velocity was measured as described above. (D) IC50
titrations of BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP. HBV nucleocapsids were
incubated for 120 min at 30°C with dNTPs and serial dilutions of the
indicated guanosine analog-TPs. The percentage of
[ -33P]dGTP incorporation relative to that for the
no-drug control is plotted on a semilogarithmic scale (mean of
triplicate samples). The values from panels C and D were used to
calculate the Kis of the guanosine analog-TPs.
|
|
We first asked whether lobucavir-TP and BMS-200475-TP are competitive
inhibitors of Pol with respect to the natural substrate dGTP. Constant
analog concentrations ranging from 0.5 to 10 nM were titrated against
the relevant Pol enzyme at a variety of S to determine the
corresponding V. Representative Lineweaver-Burk reciprocal
plots of 1/V versus 1/S (Fig. 6A and B and data
not shown) revealed that lobucavir-TP and BMS-200475-TP are indeed competitive inhibitors of the WHV and HBV Pol enzymes with regard to dGTP.
The apparent affinity of Pol for the natural substrate dGTP
(Km) versus the guanosine analogs
(Ki) was then evaluated by two methods;
Kis were either determined from plots (data not
shown) of the analog-TP concentrations against the slopes calculated from the double-reciprocal graphs at each drug concentration (Fig. 6A
and B) or via independent measurements of (i) the
Km of dGTP (Fig. 6C) and (ii) IC50
determinations from serial dilutions of BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP
at a constant dGTP concentration (Fig. 6D). The corresponding
Ki values and
Ki/Km ratios were then calculated by
the formula Ki = IC50/(1 + S/Km), with the Km of dGTP determined from the double-reciprocal plot (slope × Vmax) (34).
Table 2 lists the average values that
were obtained from three to four experiments performed with HBV
nucleocapsids by using BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP. For comparison,
we also estimated the corresponding Km and
Ki values for dCTP and 3TC-TP, respectively. Strikingly, the Kis of the guanosine analogs
were approximately three- to fourfold lower than the
Km of dGTP (3.2 versus 12 nM and 4.9 versus 13.1 nM, respectively) leading to Ki/Km
ratios of 0.27 for BMS-200475-TP and 0.37 for lobucavir-TP. The
opposite was observed for the dCTP and 3TC-TP pairing, for which the
Ki of 3TC-TP (41.5 nM) was roughly
3.2-fold higher than the corresponding Km of
dCTP (13 nM).
Comparable kinetic parameters were obtained for both
guanosine analog-dGTP pairs against WHV Pol. On the basis of
estimates of 1.6 nM for the IC50 of BMS-200475-TP and a
Km of 17.65 nM for the natural substrate dGTP, a
Ki of 1.02 nM and a
Ki/Km of 0.058 were calculated for
BMS-200475-TP. Lobucavir-TP, when titrated in the WHV Pol assay,
yielded a Ki of 0.9 nM. The
Km for dGTP in this experiment was determined to
be 28.21 nM, giving a Ki/Km value of
0.032.
Chain termination of HBV DNA synthesis.
Many nucleoside
analogs with antiviral activities share a common mode of action; they
act as substrates for viral Pols and incorporate into viral DNA chains,
an event which results in the termination of DNA synthesis. 3TC-TP has
been reported to act as an obligate chain terminator of DHBV Pol
(36), a result which was confirmed for HBV Pol in our pilot
experiments (data not shown). Due to their structures (Fig. 1), neither
BMS-200475 nor lobucavir can act as an obligate chain terminator of DNA
synthesis, but it nonetheless remains possible that incorporation of
BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP into growing hepadnaviral DNA chains
causes a subsequent failure of DNA synthesis.
To test this possibility, we used an approach termed "endogenous
sequencing" first introduced by Mason and colleagues (26). Using immature DHBV core particles from the livers of several ducks,
those investigators conducted EPAs in the presence of all four
-32P-labeled dNTPs and one of each of the four ddNTP
chain terminators, resulting in a nested set of randomly
terminated DHBV minus-strand DNA chains. Since these DNAs arise from a
discrete sequence within the replication origin, DR1, at the 3' end of
the viral pgRNA, they generate a dideoxynucleotide sequencing ladder
following deproteinization and resolution on a polyacrylamide
sequencing gel. Until now, this approach has not been applicable to HBV
due to the difficulty of obtaining enough immature HBV cores. However, endogenous sequencing with recombinant replicative HBV cores is feasible, as seen in Fig. 7B, which also
shows the influences of BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP on the
elongation of HBV minus-strand DNA chains. Compared to conventional
dideoxysequencing ladders (31) included as size controls
(Fig. 7A and C), the discrete dideoxynucleotide sequence ladder
generated by replicative HBV core-associated HBV Pol in the presence of
ddNTPs is hard to read, primarily due to an "echo" created by
initiations occurring on either side of the main minus-strand DNA start
site (35). Nevertheless, the sequence ladder can be
unequivocally aligned with a region (HBV nucleotides 1784 to 1689; Fig.
7) (10) located just 45 to 140 nucleotides upstream of DR1.
This alignment is as expected for nascent minus-strand DNA products
arising from DR1.

View larger version (59K):
[in this window]
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|
FIG. 7.
(B) Endogenous sequencing of viral minus-strand DNA from
replicative recombinant HBV nucleocapsids. Purified cores were
incubated with 130 nM [ -32P]dNTPs and either one of
the four cold ddNTPs (26 µM) or unlabeled lobucavir-TP or
BMS-200475-TP (2 and 10 µM), as indicated at the top. Deproteinized
reaction products were electrophoresed through a urea-6%
polyacrylamide gel alongside conventional dideoxynucleotide sequencing
ladders (A and C). The incorporated radioactivity was visualized by
scanning the dried gel with a phosphorimager. The corresponding
sequence of HBV minus-strand DNA is depicted below the figure. Major
drug-induced termination sites (sites 1 to 8), are indicated, as are
their alignments relative to the G residues (+2 and +3). nts.,
nucleotides.
|
|
Addition of BMS-200475-TP or lobucavir-TP to the EPA reaction (at
either 2 or 10 µM) clearly suppressed HBV Pol activity compared to
the activity of the no-drug control lane and also caused stalling at
discrete sites. For lobucavir-TP, the stops characteristically occurred
two or three residues beyond each and every one of the relatively few
dG incorporation sites in the region of the sequence that can be read
from the gel (sites 1 to 10). The earlier sites (sites 1 to 3) appeared
to be preferred at higher drug concentrations. The termination pattern
of BMS-200475-TP obviously differs from that of lobucavir-TP, yet the
two patterns are clearly related, as is evident from the exact
alignment of certain of the higher bands in Fig. 7 which correspond to
sites 5 to 10 and beyond. Inspection of the sequence suggests that
BMS-200475-TP is less efficient at eliciting chain termination at the
proximal termination sites (which mainly comprise single dG residues)
but rather effects termination at sequence elements such as closely
spaced dG residues or dG doublets; again, these termination sites
appear to be two to three residues beyond the normal dG incorporation sites.
 |
DISCUSSION |
In the study described in this report we have assessed the precise
modes of action of BMS-200475 and lobucavir by testing the effect of
their TP forms using in vitro assays which assess the WHV, DHBV, and
HBV Pols as well as the three distinct steps of hepadnaviral
replication (11, 23). The WHV endogenous Pol reaction uses
detergent-permeabilized WHV virions which are mainly competent for
late-stage WHV DNA synthesis, i.e., limited synthesis of plus-strand
DNA (6). The DHBV priming reaction described by Wang and
Seeger (46) mostly measures (in our experiments, almost
exclusively) the priming activity of the DHBV Pol. Finally, HBV Pol
activity was measured in a recently described preparation of HBV
nucleocapsids that are robustly competent for at least two phases of
the HBV replication reaction: the priming step and RT of minus DNA
strands (35).
In terms of their effect on hepadnaviral Pol activity in vitro, the TP
forms of BMS-200475 and lobucavir were essentially indistinguishable.
Both were powerful inhibitors of the DHBV, WHV, and HBV Pols in
vitro and appeared to be almost equipotent against the
priming, minus-strand elongation, and plus-strand synthesis
reactions. The comparable efficacy seen at the TP level contrasts
markedly with the sharp potency difference observed for the parent
nucleosides in 2.2.15 cells (3.8 nM for BMS-200475 versus 2.5 µM for
lobucavir), suggesting that poor phosphorylation is the likely
explanation for the weaker potency of lobucavir in cultured cells.
With respect to potency, in our hands BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP
were clearly superior to the TP forms of SQ-32829, GCV, ACV, ddG, and
3TC. This was true for all hepadnaviral Pols and replication steps
assayed (Table 1). The best of the remaining inhibitors were probably
ACV and ddG in the WHV Pol assay and ACV and 3TC in the HBV Pol assay.
However, these TPs had to be present at levels 5- to 15-fold higher
than the BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP levels to elicit 50%
inhibition of the respective assay. Penciclovir-TP was not tested in
this work, but it was less effective than acyclovir-TP at inhibiting
hepadnaviral minus-strand DNA elongation in a recent in vitro study
(5).
The different TPs were distinguished most sharply with respect to their
effects on the synthesis of the short Pol-linked DNA primer
product. In the unique hepadnaviral priming reaction, Pol elaborates a short 3- or 4-base DNA oligomer by copying an RNA motif located in the bulge of the epsilon stem-loop (27, 41, 45). The DNA primer corresponds to GTAA for DHBV Pol
and GAA or TGAA for HBV Pol. Our findings suggest that the DHBV and HBV Pol priming reactions were very sensitive to inhibition by
BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP but were largely refractory to all
other TPs tested; ACV-TP and GCV-TP showed some suppression of HBV
priming, but only at the highest concentrations tested. In contrast
to BMS-200475-TP or lobucavir-TP, 3TC-TP essentially appeared to be
inactive against the hepadnaviral priming reaction and actually appeared to enhance HBV priming, presumably reflecting a buildup in
priming products caused by the ability of 3TC-TP to effectively block all replication beyond the priming step.
The findings on the priming reaction described above accord well
with those obtained in some recent studies and add BMS-200475 and
lobucavir to a growing list of hepadnaviral priming inhibitors. The
ability of a given dNTP analog to interfere with hepadnaviral priming appears to correlate with its ability to incorporate into the primer chain. Thus, guanosine analogs such as BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir (this report), as well as penciclovir-TP, ACV-TP, and
carbocyclic 2'-deoxyguanosine-TP (2'CDG-TP) (5), inhibit both HBV and DHBV priming. The TTP analogs fialuridine-TP and 2'-fluoro-
-L-arabinofuranosyluracil-TP
(
-L-FMAU-TP) inhibit DHBV priming (38,
49) but have not been shown to block the HBV priming
reaction. However, guanosine analogs differ markedly in their
ability to suppress priming, as demonstrated by our
findings and by those of Dannaoui et al. (5), who showed
that penciclovir-TP and ACV-TP are comparably modest inhibitors of
the DHBV priming reaction. To date, the only truly effective
priming inhibitors appear to be BMS-200475-TP and
lobucavir-TP (this work) and the structurally related compound 2'CDG-TP
(5). It remains to be experimentally determined whether
BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP become covalently linked to Pol during
the priming reaction, as we suspect, and whether this
would have any effect on the subsequent addition of dNTPs. However, our
data on HBV Pol priming (Fig. 5) suggest that BMS-200475-TP
severely limits the subsequent addition of [
-32P]dATP
into the HBV primer; in contrast, 2'CDG-TP reportedly only weakly
inhibits addition of downstream dNTPs (5). We note that the
mechanism by which any of these dG analogs inhibit priming remains
to be elucidated, and mechanisms other than incorporation have not been
ruled out.
Of considerable mechanistic interest were the quite different effects
on the HBV Pol reaction of the two very closely related compounds
SQ-32829-TP and lobucavir-TP (Fig. 1). Lobucavir-TP was a much
stronger overall inhibitor of hepadnaviral Pols than SQ-32829-TP,
emphasizing the exquisite selectivity with which these enzymes can
distinguish even the most closely related structures. More remarkably,
however, SQ-32829 ultimately suppressed all HBV Pol elongation at the
highest concentrations, but without showing any inhibition of HBV
priming. To our knowledge, SQ-32829 is the only guanosine analog to
show a sharp discrimination between the two HBV Pol replication
steps (Fig. 2). The remaining G analog-TPs generally inhibited both
reactions, although the data in Table 1 suggest that some were better
at inhibiting elongation versus priming. It is believed that Pol
adopts different conformations for the priming and elongation
reactions (40), as evidenced by the drug phosphonoformic
acid, which blocks elongation but not priming (21, 24, 35,
46). The fact that a dGTP analog can discriminate between the
priming and elongation activities of Pol further reinforces the
idea that a restructuring of the architecture of the dNTP binding
domain of HBV Pol must accompany the transition between these two states.
Our kinetic analyses of the effect of BMS-200475-TP and lobucavir-TP
on the WHV and HBV Pol reactions confirm that these carbocyclic guanine
compounds are very potent inhibitors of hepadnaviral Pols. Indeed, the
low Ki/Km ratios (0.27 to 0.37) seen
in our studies imply that Pol has a higher affinity for the two TP
analogs than for the natural substrate. An earlier report by Price et
al. (29) on 2'CDG-TP determined a
Ki/Km for this compound to be
~0.18 in 2.2.15-derived HBV cores, and carbovir-TP also appears to be
highly active against hepadnaviral Pols (6). Carbocyclic
guanine nucleoside analogs thus appear to provide a particularly potent
class of HBV Pol inhibitors.
Finally, although BMS-200475 and lobucavir, like 2'CDG, are not
obligate chain terminators of DNA synthesis by virtue of the OH group
content of their sugar moieties, our endogenous sequencing data
strongly suggest that template-dependent incorporation of either analog
in place of a normal dG residue can lead to chain termination 2 or 3 nucleotides later. This finding argues that both nucleoside analogs may
act as structural terminators, perhaps by introducing enough structural
distortion to preclude the enzyme from optimal interaction with the 3'
end of the growing DNA chain. Surprisingly, we found different
termination patterns for lobucavir-TP and BMS-200475-TP. While the
former terminated chain elongation following single dGs, BMS-200475-TP
caused preferential termination after dG doublets or dG-rich stretches.
In summary, this study has confirmed that the TP forms of BMS-200475
and lobucavir are potent inhibitors of the HBV, WHV, and DHBV Pols, and
that they effectively suppress the priming and elongation steps of
HBV replication. Both are competitive inhibitors of Pol with respect to
dGTP and are apparently preferred by hepadnaviral Pols over the natural
substrate. They act, at least in part, via structural, nonobligate
chain termination of HBV Pol, although other modes of inhibition are
not excluded. These findings further validate efforts to assess the
potential of these two drugs as therapeutic agents against chronic HBV
infection in humans.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
Our colleagues Brian Terry, Chris Cianci, Greg Bisacchi, and Bob
Zahler provided TPs. Bill Mason (Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia,
Pa.) shared his expertise concerning endogenous sequencing. Finally, we
thank Steve Innaimo as well as Junius Clark and members of the in vivo
group for encouragement and valuable discussion.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Present mailing address:
Schering-Plough Research Institute, 2015 Galloping Hill Rd.,
Kenilworth, NJ 07033-0539. Phone: (908) 740-7446. Fax: (908)
740-3918. E-mail: david.standring{at}spcorp.com.
Present address: Schering-Plough Research Institute, Kenilworth, NJ
07033-0539.
Present address: GlaxoWellcome, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709.
 |
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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 1998, p. 3200-3208, Vol. 42, No. 12
0066-4804/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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