Inhibition of sickling in vitro by three purine-based antiviral agents: an approach to the treatment of sickle cell disease.
Author(s): DeBellis RH, Chen BX, Erlanger BF
Affiliation(s): Department of Medicine, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Publication date & source: 2003-09, Blood Cells Mol Dis., 31(2):286-90.
Publication type:
As a result of an in vitro screening effort the antiviral agent acyclovir was found to inhibit aggregation of hemoglobin S and the sickling of erythrocytes from individuals with sickle cell disease. Sickling of the erythrocytes was significantly inhibited at 200 microg/ml under essentially anaerobic conditions, considerably more hypoxic than the conditions in which sickling occurs in sickle cell patients. The structurally related guanine-based antiviral agents ganciclovir, valacyclovir, and penciclovir were also tested. Valacyclovir and ganciclovir showed comparable anti-sickling activity at concentrations similar to that of acyclovir. An examination of the shared structural characteristics of the four guanine derivatives linked anti-sickling activity to the presence of an oxygen atom alpha to the N9 of the guanine moiety. These findings suggest a new approach in the search for new agents for the treatment of patients with sickle cell disease.
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