Enterovirus Inhibition by Hinged Aromatic Compounds with Polynuclei

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Abstract

The modern world has no available drugs for the treatment of enteroviruses (EV), which affect millions of people worldwide each year. The EV71 is a major causative disease for hand, foot, and mouth disease; sometimes it is associated with severe central nervous system diseases. Treatment for enteroviral infection is mainly supportive; treatment for aseptic meningitis caused by enteroviruses is also generally symptomatic. Upon the urgent request of new anti-enterovirus drugs, a series of hinged aromatic compounds with polynulei were synthesized through two different chemical pathways. Among these morpholine–furan/thiophene/pyrrole–benzene–pyrazole conjugates, three new agents exhibited inhibitory activity with EC50 = 2.29–6.16 µM toward EV71 strain BrCr in RD cells. Their selectivity index values were reached as high as 33.4. Their structure–activity relationship was deduced that a thiophene derivative with morpholine and trifluorobenzene rings showed the greatest antiviral activity, with EC50 = 2.29 µM.

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APA

Hwu, J. R., Panja, A., Jayakumar, S., Tsay, S. C., Tan, K. T., Huang, W. C., … Neyts, J. (2020). Enterovirus Inhibition by Hinged Aromatic Compounds with Polynuclei. Molecules, 25(17). https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25173821

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