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SARS-CoV-2 Main Protease Drug Design, Assay Development, and Drug Resistance Studies

SARS-CoV-2 is the etiological pathogen of the COVID-19 pandemic, which led to more than 6.5 million deaths since the beginning of the outbreak in December 2019. The unprecedented disruption of social life and public health caused by COVID-19 calls for fast-track development of diagnostic kits, vaccines, and antiviral drugs. Small molecule antivirals are essential complements of vaccines and can be used for the treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infections. Currently, there are three FDA-approved antiviral drugs, remdesivir, molnupiravir, and paxlovid. Given the moderate clinical efficacy of remdesivir and molnupiravir, the drug-drug interaction of paxlovid, and the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 variants with potential drug-resistant mutations, there is a pressing need for additional antivirals to combat current and future coronavirus outbreaks.In this Account, we describe our efforts in developing covalent and noncovalent main protease (Mpro) inhibitors and the identification of nirmatrelvir-resistant mutants. We initially discovered GC376, calpain inhibitors II and XII, and boceprevir as dual inhibitors of Mpro and host cathepsin L from a screening of a protease inhibitor library. Given the controversy of targeting cathepsin L, we subsequently shifted the focus to designing Mpro-specific inhibitors. Specifically, guided by the X-ray crystal structures of these initial hits, we designed noncovalent Mpro inhibitors such as Jun8-76-3R that are highly selective toward Mpro over host cathepsin L. Using the same scaffold, we also designed covalent Mpro inhibitors with novel cysteine reactive warheads containing di- and trihaloacetamides, which similarly had high target specificity. In parallel to our drug discovery efforts, we developed the cell-based FlipGFP Mpro assay to characterize the cellular target engagement of our rationally designed Mpro inhibitors. The FlipGFP assay was also applied to validate the structurally disparate Mpro inhibitors reported in the literature. Lastly, we introduce recent progress in identifying naturally occurring Mpro mutants that are resistant to nirmatrelvir from genome mining of the nsp5 sequences deposited in the GISAID database. Collectively, the covalent and noncovalent Mpro inhibitors and the nirmatrelvir-resistant hot spot residues from our studies provide insightful guidance for future work aimed at developing orally bioavailable Mpro inhibitors that do not have overlapping resistance profile with nirmatrelvir.

 

Comments:

The COVID-19 pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 has resulted in significant public health and social disruption, necessitating the rapid development of diagnostic kits, vaccines, and antiviral drugs. Currently, there are three FDA-approved antiviral drugs, but their clinical efficacy is moderate, and the emergence of drug-resistant viral variants is a concern. Thus, additional antivirals are urgently needed to combat current and future outbreaks.

This Account describes efforts to develop covalent and noncovalent inhibitors of the SARS-CoV-2 main protease (Mpro) and the identification of nirmatrelvir-resistant mutants. The authors initially identified several dual inhibitors of Mpro and host cathepsin L from a screening of a protease inhibitor library but subsequently focused on designing Mpro-specific inhibitors. Guided by X-ray crystal structures, they designed noncovalent and covalent Mpro inhibitors with high target specificity. They also developed a cell-based assay to characterize target engagement and validated structurally disparate Mpro inhibitors reported in the literature.

Additionally, the authors identified naturally occurring Mpro mutants that are resistant to nirmatrelvir from genome mining. This provides guidance for future work aimed at developing orally bioavailable Mpro inhibitors that do not have overlapping resistance profiles with nirmatrelvir.

Overall, these efforts provide promising leads for the development of effective antivirals against SARS-CoV-2 and highlight the importance of continued research to combat current and future outbreaks.

Related Products

Cat.No. Product Name Information
S3733 Boceprevir Boceprevir (EBP 520, SCH 503034) is an oral, direct acting hepatitis C virus (HCV) protease inhibitor with Ki value of 14 nM for NS3. It is used in combination with other antiviral agents in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C, genotype 1.

Related Targets

HCV Protease COVID-19