Back to Search Start Over

Alpha-ketoamides as broad-spectrum inhibitors of coronavirus and enterovirus replication

Authors :
Rolf Hilgenfeld
Daizong Lin
Hong Liu
Yong Nian
Eric J. Snijder
Adriaan H. de Wilde
Johan Neyts
Qingjun Ma
Jiang Wang
Albrecht von Brunn
Pieter Leyssen
Linlin Zhang
Yuri Kusov
Kristina Lanko
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

The main protease of coronaviruses and the 3C protease of enteroviruses share a similar active-site architecture and a unique requirement for glutamine in the P1 position of the substrate. Because of their unique specificity and essential role in viral polyprotein processing, these proteases are suitable targets for the development of antiviral drugs. In order to obtain near-equipotent, broad-spectrum antivirals against alphacoronaviruses, betacoronaviruses, and enteroviruses, we pursued structure-based design of peptidomimetic α-ketoamides as inhibitors of main and 3C proteases. Six crystal structures of protease:inhibitor complexes were determined as part of this study. Compounds synthesized were tested against the recombinant proteases as well as in viral replicons and virus-infected cell cultures; most of them were not cell-toxic. Optimization of the P2 substituent of the α-ketoamides proved crucial for achieving near-equipotency against the three virus genera. The best near-equipotent inhibitors, 11u (P2 = cyclopentylmethyl) and 11r (P2 = cyclohexylmethyl), display low-micromolar EC50 values against enteroviruses, alphacoronaviruses, and betacoronaviruses in cell cultures. In Huh7 cells, 11r exhibits three-digit picomolar activity against Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6cda82a35d30f122d25251ac2fcfbe4e