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Dive into the research topics where Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston is active.

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Featured researches published by Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2016

Oxidative Stress during HIV Infection: Mechanisms and Consequences

A. V. Ivanov; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Olga N. Ivanova; S. N. Kochetkov; Elizaveta Starodubova; Birke Bartosch; Maria G. Isaguliants

It is generally acknowledged that reactive oxygen species (ROS) play crucial roles in a variety of natural processes in cells. If increased to levels which cannot be neutralized by the defense mechanisms, they damage biological molecules, alter their functions, and also act as signaling molecules thus generating a spectrum of pathologies. In this review, we summarize current data on oxidative stress markers associated with human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) infection, analyze mechanisms by which this virus triggers massive ROS production, and describe the status of various defense mechanisms of the infected host cell. In addition, we have scrutinized scarce data on the effect of ROS on HIV-1 replication. Finally, we present current state of knowledge on the redox alterations as crucial factors of HIV-1 pathogenicity, such as neurotoxicity and dementia, exhaustion of CD4+/CD8+ T-cells, predisposition to lung infections, and certain side effects of the antiretroviral therapy, and compare them to the pathologies associated with the nitrosative stress.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

1-[2-(2-Benzoyl- and 2-benzylphenoxy)ethyl]uracils as potent anti-HIV-1 agents

Mikhail S. Novikov; Olga N. Ivanova; A. V. Ivanov; Alexander Ozerov; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Kartik Temburnikar; Galina V. Gurskaya; S. N. Kochetkov; Christophe Pannecouque; Jan Balzarini; Katherine L. Seley-Radtke

Abstract Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) are key components in highly active antiretroviral therapy for treating HIV-1. Herein we present the synthesis for a series of N1-alkylated uracil derivatives bearing ω-(2-benzyl- and 2-benzoylphenoxy)alkyl substituents as novel NNRTIs. These compounds displayed anti-HIV activity similar to that of nevirapine and several of them exhibited activity against the K103N/Y181C RT mutant HIV-1 strain. Further evaluation revealed that the inhibitors were active against most nevirapine-resistant mono- and di-substituted RTs with the exception of the V106A RT. Thus, the candidate compounds can be regarded as potential lead compounds against the wild-type virus and drug-resistant forms.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2016

Hepatitis C Virus NS5A Protein Triggers Oxidative Stress by Inducing NADPH Oxidases 1 and 4 and Cytochrome P450 2E1

Olga A. Smirnova; Olga N. Ivanova; Birke Bartosch; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Furkat Mukhtarov; S. N. Kochetkov; A. V. Ivanov

Replication of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is associated with the induction of oxidative stress, which is thought to play a major role in various liver pathologies associated with chronic hepatitis C. NS5A protein of the virus is one of the two key viral proteins that are known to trigger production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). To date it has been considered that NS5A induces oxidative stress by altering calcium homeostasis. Herein we show that NS5A-induced oxidative stress was only moderately inhibited by the intracellular calcium chelator BAPTA-AM and not at all inhibited by the drug that blocks the Ca(2+) flux from ER to mitochondria. Furthermore, ROS production was not accompanied by induction of ER oxidoreductins (Ero1), H2O2-producing enzymes that are implicated in the regulation of calcium fluxes. Instead, we found that NS5A contributes to ROS production by activating expression of NADPH oxidases 1 and 4 as well as cytochrome P450 2E1. These effects were mediated by domain I of NS5A protein. NOX1 and NOX4 induction was mediated by enhanced production of transforming growth factor β1 (TGFβ1). Thus, our data show that NS5A protein induces oxidative stress by several multistep mechanisms.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

N1,N3-disubstituted uracils as nonnucleoside inhibitors of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase.

Mikhail S. Novikov; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Denis A. Babkov; Maria P. Paramonova; A. V. Ivanov; Sergey A Gavryushov; Anastasia L. Khandazhinskaya; S. N. Kochetkov; Christophe Pannecouque; Graciela Andrei; Robert Snoeck; Jan Balzarini; Katherine L. Seley-Radtke

Abstract A series of phenyloxyethyl and cinnamyl derivatives of substituted uracils were synthesized and found to exhibit potent activity against HIV-RT and HIV replication in cell culture. In general, the cinnamyl derivatives proved superior to the phenyloxyethyl derivatives, however 1-[2-(4-methylphenoxy)ethyl]-3-(3,5-dimethylbenzyl)uracil (19) exhibited the highest activity (EC50 =0.27μM) thus confirming that the 3-benzyluracil fragment in the NNRTI structure can be regarded as a functional analogue of the benzophenone pharmacophore typically found in NNRTIs.


Oncotarget | 2017

Oxidative stress, a trigger of hepatitis C and B virus-induced liver carcinogenesis

A. V. Ivanov; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Daria A. Tyurina; Olga N. Ivanova; S. N. Kochetkov; Birke Bartosch; Maria G. Isaguliants

Virally induced liver cancer usually evolves over long periods of time in the context of a strongly oxidative microenvironment, characterized by chronic liver inflammation and regeneration processes. They ultimately lead to oncogenic mutations in many cellular signaling cascades that drive cell growth and proliferation. Oxidative stress, induced by hepatitis viruses, therefore is one of the factors that drives the neoplastic transformation process in the liver. This review summarizes current knowledge on oxidative stress and oxidative stress responses induced by human hepatitis B and C viruses. It focuses on the molecular mechanisms by which these viruses activate cellular enzymes/systems that generate or scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) and control cellular redox homeostasis. The impact of an altered cellular redox homeostasis on the initiation and establishment of chronic viral infection, as well as on the course and outcome of liver fibrosis and hepatocarcinogenesis will be discussed The review neither discusses reactive nitrogen species, although their metabolism is interferes with that of ROS, nor antioxidants as potential therapeutic remedies against viral infections, both subjects meriting an independent review.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Exploration of acetanilide derivatives of 1-(ω-phenoxyalkyl)uracils as novel inhibitors of Hepatitis C Virus replication

Andrea Magri; Alexander Ozerov; V. L. Tunitskaya; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Ahmed Wahid; Mario Pirisi; Peter Simmonds; A. V. Ivanov; Mikhail S. Novikov; Arvind H. Patel

Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) is a major public health problem worldwide. While highly efficacious directly-acting antiviral agents have been developed in recent years, their high costs and relative inaccessibility make their use limited. Here, we describe new 1-(ω-phenoxyalkyl)uracils bearing acetanilide fragment in 3 position of pyrimidine ring as potential antiviral drugs against HCV. Using a combination of various biochemical assays and in vitro virus infection and replication models, we show that our compounds are able to significantly reduce viral genomic replication, independently of virus genotype, with their IC50 values in the nanomolar range. We also demonstrate that our compounds can block de novo RNA synthesis and that effect is dependent on a chemical structure of the compounds. A detailed structure-activity relationship revealed that the most active compounds were the N3-substituted uracil derivatives containing 6-(4-bromophenoxy)hexyl or 8-(4-bromophenoxy)octyl fragment at N1 position.


MedChemComm | 2013

Structure-activity evaluation of new uracil-based non-nucleoside inhibitors of HIV reverse transcriptase

Elena S. Matyugina; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Alexander N. Geisman; Mikhail S. Novikov; Alexander O. Chizhov; S. N. Kochetkov; Katherine L. Seley-Radtke; Anastasia L. Khandazhinskaya

A new series of potential nonnucleoside inhibitors of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (NNRTIs) based on the carbocyclic 5′-nor-uracil scaffold were designed and synthesized. Three different aspects of the scaffold were investigated: the effects of adding a linker between the carbocyclic and phenyl fragments, introduction of different substituents on the benzoyl residue and replacing the central carbocyclic ring with a benzyl group. Analogues of 2′,3′-dideoxy-2′,3′-didehydro-5′-nor-uridine, bearing 3,5-dichloro- or 3,5-dimethylbenzoyl groups, showed inhibitory activity against HIV-RT wild-type (IC50 5–10 μM) and mutants L100I (IC50 1.2–2.1 μM) and K103N (IC50 8–17 μM).


MedChemComm | 2013

5′-Nor carbocyclic nucleosides: unusual nonnucleoside inhibitors of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase

Elena S. Matyugina; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Denis A. Babkov; Mikhail S. Novikov; A. V. Ivanov; S. N. Kochetkov; Jan Balzarini; Katherine L. Seley-Radtke; Anastasia L. Khandazhinskaya

A new series of potential nonnucleoside inhibitors of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (NNRTIs) based on the carbocyclic 5′-nor-uracil scaffold were designed and synthesized. Binding modes in the active site of the enzyme were studied computationally to provide insight on potential interactions. Several of the 2′,3′-dideoxy-2′,3′-didehydro-5′-nor-uridine analogues showed inhibitory activity against wild-type and mutant (L100I) HIV-RT with Ki 13–18 μM and 1–11 μM, respectively.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Scaffold hopping: Exploration of acetanilide-containing uracil analogues as potential NNRTIs

Denis A. Babkov; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; Maria P. Paramonova; Alexander Ozerov; A. V. Ivanov; Alexander O. Chizhov; Anastasia L. Khandazhinskaya; S. N. Kochetkov; Jan Balzarini; Dirk Daelemans; Christophe Pannecouque; Katherine L. Seley-Radtke; Mikhail S. Novikov

In order to identify novel nonnucleoside inhibitors of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase two series of amide-containing uracil derivatives were designed as hybrids of two scaffolds of previously reported inhibitors. Subsequent biological evaluation confirmed acetamide uracil derivatives 15a-k as selective micromolar NNRTIs with a first generation-like resistance profile. Molecular modeling of the most active compounds 15c and 15i was employed to provide insight on their inhibitory properties and direct future design efforts.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2016

Hydrophobic-core PEGylated graft copolymer-stabilized nanoparticles composed of insoluble non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors exhibit strong anti-HIV activity

Anita M. Leporati; Mikhail S. Novikov; Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston; S. P. Korolev; Anastasia L. Khandazhinskaya; S. N. Kochetkov; Julian Goding; Elijah M. Bolotin; Marina Gottikh; Alexei Bogdanov

Benzophenone-uracil (BPU) scaffold-derived candidate compounds are efficient non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) with extremely low solubility in water. We proposed to use hydrophobic core (methoxypolyethylene glycol-polylysine) graft copolymer (HC-PGC) technology for stabilizing nanoparticle-based formulations of BPU NNRTI in water. Co-lyophilization of NNRTI/HC-PGC mixtures resulted in dry powders that could be easily reconstituted with the formation of 150-250 nm stable nanoparticles (NP). The NP and HC-PGC were non-toxic in experiments with TZM-bl reporter cells. Nanoparticles containing selected efficient candidate Z107 NNRTI preserved the ability to inhibit HIV-1 reverse transcriptase polymerase activities with no appreciable change of EC50. The formulation with HC-PGC bearing residues of oleic acid resulted in nanoparticles that were nearly identical in anti-HIV-1 potency when compared to Z107 solutions in DMSO (EC50=7.5±3.8 vs. 8.2±5.1 nM). Therefore, hydrophobic core macromolecular stabilizers form nanoparticles with insoluble NNRTI while preserving the antiviral activity of the drug cargo.

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Dive into the Vladimir T. Valuev-Elliston's collaboration.

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S. N. Kochetkov

Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology

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A. V. Ivanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Anastasia L. Khandazhinskaya

Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology

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Olga N. Ivanova

Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology

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Elena S. Matyugina

Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology

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Christophe Pannecouque

Rega Institute for Medical Research

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Jan Balzarini

Rega Institute for Medical Research

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