Affiliation: | 1. Department of Chemistry, College of Natural Sciences, Can Tho University, Campus II, 3/2 street Ninh Kieu District, Can Tho City, Vietnam;2. Discovery Biology Division, Applied Molecular Virology Laboratory, Institut Pasteur Korea 696, Seongnam, 13488 Republic of Korea Division of Bio-Medical Science and Technology, University of Science and Technology, Daejeon, 34141 Republic of Korea These authors contributed equally to this work.;3. Discovery Biology Division, Applied Molecular Virology Laboratory, Institut Pasteur Korea 696, Seongnam, 13488 Republic of Korea;4. URE Dengue and Arboviruses, Institut Pasteur de Nouvelle-Calédonie, 98800 Noumea, New Caledonia;5. Technology Development Platform, Institut Pasteur Korea 696, Seongnam, 13488 Republic of Korea |
Abstract: | We have synthesized 50 benzimidazole (BMZ) derivatives with 1,2-phenylenediamines and aromatic aldehydes under mild oxidation conditions by using inexpensive, nontoxic inorganic salt sodium metabisulfite in a one-pot condensation reaction and screened their ability to interfere with Zika virus (ZIKV) infection utilizing a cell-based phenotypic assay. Seven BMZs inhibited an African ZIKV strain with a selectivity index (SI=CC50/EC50) of 9–37. Structure-activity relationship analysis demonstrated that substitution at the C-2, N-1, and C-5 positions of the BMZ ring were important for anti-ZIKV activity. The hybrid structure of BMZ and naphthalene rings was a structural feature responsible for the high anti-ZIKV activity. Importantly, BMZs inhibited ZIKV in human neural stem cells, a physiologically relevant system considering the severe congenital anomalies, like microcephaly, caused by ZIKV infection. Compound 39 displayed the highest antiviral efficacy against the African ZIKV strain in Huh-7 (SI>37) and neural stem cells (SI=12). Compound 35 possessed the highest activity in Vero cells (SI=115). Together, our data indicate that BMZs derivatives have to be considered for the development of ZIKV therapeutic interventions. |