Publications by authors named "M I Cockett"

Article Synopsis
  • Newer HIV-1 maturation inhibitors, like VH3739937 (VH-937), have shown promise as effective antiretroviral treatments in clinical settings.
  • VH-937 features a 4-cyanopyridyl ether design that is a step up from earlier inhibitors, leading to a better antiviral profile and effectiveness against the A364V mutation, a common resistance issue.
  • Due to its improved pharmacokinetic properties, VH-937 has the potential for infrequent dosing, with initial human studies supporting the possibility of once-weekly administration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Antimicrobial resistance poses a significant threat to the sustainability of effective treatments against the three most prevalent infectious diseases: malaria, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and tuberculosis. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop novel drugs and treatment protocols capable of reducing the emergence of resistance and combating it when it does occur. In this Review, we present an overview of the status and underlying molecular mechanisms of drug resistance in these three diseases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

GSK878 is a newly described HIV-1 inhibitor that binds to the mature capsid (CA) hexamer in a pocket originally identified as the binding site of the well-studied CA inhibitor PF-74. Here, we show that GSK878 is highly potent, inhibiting an HIV-1 reporter virus in MT-2 cells with a mean 50% effective concentration (EC) of 39 pM and inhibiting a panel of 48 chimeric viruses containing diverse CA sequences with a mean EC of 94 pM. CA mutations associated with reduced susceptibility to other inhibitors that bind to PF-74 binding site (L56I, M66I, Q67H, N74D, T107N, and Q67H/N74D) also reduced susceptibility to GSK878, with M66I, Q67H/N74D, and L56I having the greatest impact on antiviral activity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Long-acting (LA) human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) antiretroviral therapy characterized by a ≥1 month dosing interval offers significant advantages over daily oral therapy. However, the criteria for compounds that enter clinical development are high. Exceptional potency and low plasma clearance are required to meet dose size requirements; excellent chemical stability and/or crystalline form stability is required to meet formulation requirements, and new antivirals in HIV-1 therapy need to be largely free of side effects and drug-drug interactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

GSK3640254 is an HIV-1 maturation inhibitor (MI) that exhibits significantly improved antiviral activity toward a range of clinically relevant polymorphic variants with reduced sensitivity toward the second-generation MI GSK3532795 (BMS-955176). The key structural difference between GSK3640254 and its predecessor is the replacement of the -substituted benzoic acid moiety attached at the C-3 position of the triterpenoid core with a cyclohex-3-ene-1-carboxylic acid substituted with a CHF moiety at the carbon atom α- to the pharmacophoric carboxylic acid. This structural element provided a new vector with which to explore structure-activity relationships (SARs) and led to compounds with improved polymorphic coverage while preserving pharmacokinetic (PK) properties.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF