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Gemcitabine is a nucleoside analogue of deoxycytidine and has been reported to be a broad-spectrum antiviral agent against both DNA and RNA viruses. Screening of a nucleos(t)ide analogue-focused library identified gemcitabine and its derivatives (compounds , , and ) blocking influenza virus infection. To improve their antiviral selectivity by reducing cytotoxicity, 14 additional derivatives were synthesized in which the pyridine rings of and were chemically modified. Structure-and-activity and structure-and-toxicity relationship studies demonstrated that compounds and were most potent against influenza A and B viruses but minimally cytotoxic. It is noteworthy that in contrast to cytotoxic gemcitabine, they inhibited viral infection with 90% effective concentrations of 14.5-34.3 and 11.4-15.9 μM, respectively, maintaining viability of mock-infected cells over 90% at 300 μM. Resulting antiviral selectivity was comparable to that of a clinically approved nucleoside analogue, favipiravir. The cell-based viral polymerase assay proved the mode-of-action of and targeting viral RNA replication and/or transcription. In a murine influenza A virus-infection model, intraperitoneal administration of not only reduced viral RNA level in the lungs but also alleviated infection-mediated pulmonary infiltrates. In addition, it inhibited replication of severe acute respiratory syndrome virus 2 infection in human lung cells at subtoxic concentrations. The present study could provide a medicinal chemistry framework for the synthesis of a new class of viral polymerase inhibitors.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10081574PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsinfecdis.3c00034DOI Listing

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