New Antivirals and Drug Resistance
Author(s)
Colman, PM;
Journal Title
ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOCHEMISTRY
Publication Type
S
Abstract
Progress in the discovery of new antiviral medicines is tempered by the rapidity with which drug-resistant variants emerge. A review of the resistance-suppressing properties of four classes of antivirals is presented: influenza virus neuraminidase inhibitors, HIV protease inhibitors, antibodies, and protein-based fusion inhibitors. The analysis supports the hypothesis that the more similar the drug is to the target's natural ligands, the higher the barrier to resistance. However, other factors, such as entropy compensation and solvent anchoring, might also be exploited for improved drug design.
Publisher
ANNUAL REVIEWS
Keywords
HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS; RESPIRATORY SYNCYTIAL VIRUS; HIV PROTEASE INHIBITORS; AMINO-ACID SUBSTITUTIONS; D-PEPTIDE INHIBITORS; INFLUENZA-A VIRUSES; TYPE-1 ANTIBODY 2F5; IN-VITRO; 3-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURE; CRYSTAL-STRUCTURES
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2009-01-01 12:00:00
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