HIV-1 Tat is one of six regulatory proteins that are required for viral replication and is an attractive target for the development of new anti-HIV agents. Screening of microbial extracts using a whole cell Tat-dependent transactivation assay, which guided the separation of the active broths, led to the identification of five structurally diverse classes (M(R) range 232-1126) of natural products. These include i) three sesquiterpenoids, namely, sporogen-AO1, petasol, and 6-dehydropetasol, ii) two resorcylic 14-membered lactones, namely monorden and monocillin IV, iii) a ten-membered lactone, iv) a quinoline and quinoxiline bicyclic octadepsipeptides, namely echinomycin and UK-63598, and v) a cyclic heptapeptide, ternatin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTat is a small HIV protein essential for both viral replication and the progression of HIV disease. In our efforts to discover Tat inhibitors from natural product screening of microbial fermentation extracts, we discovered durhamycin A (1) as a potent inhibitor (IC(50) = 4.8 nM) of Tat transactivation.
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