Naphthalene-based PLpro
inhibitors show potential as COVID-19 therapeutics
A group of small molecules called naphthalene-based
PLpro inhibitors have been shown to block the activity of a SARS-CoV-2 protein,
demonstrating potential as COVID-19 therapeutics as per study at University of Georgia
HOPE FOR THE WORLD
From the University
of Georgia (UGA), US, a team led by Professor Scott Pegan, director of the
university’s Center for Drug Discovery, was the first to evaluate the
SARS-CoV-2 protein PLpro, known to be essential in other corona viruses for
both its replication and its ability to suppress host immune function.
“The PLpro from SARS-CoV-2 behaved differently than its predecessor that
caused the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak in 2003.
Specifically, our data suggests that the SARS-CoV-2 PLpro is less effective at
its immune suppression roles,” said Pegan. “This may be one of the underlying
reasons why the current virus is not as fatal as the virus from the 2003
outbreak… The COVID-19 virus infects, but people don’t run a fever before they
are contagious, so there’s a lot of focus on how virulence factors like PLpro
have been modified by nature to give the virus a better chance, from its
perspective, to coexist with them.”
The team started to
explore inhibitors designed to knock out PLpro and stop replication of the
virus. They began with a series of compounds that were discovered 12 years ago
and shown to be effective against SARS, but development was cut short since
SARS had not reappeared.
“Obviously now they see the current corona virus is probably going to be
with us for a while – if not this one, then probably other types of corona viruses,”
Pegan said. “These compounds are a good starting point for therapeutic
development. They have all the properties you would typically want to find in a
drug and they have a history of not being considered toxic.”
These compounds, naphthalene-based PLpro inhibitors, are shown to be
effective at halting SARS-CoV-2 PLpro activity as well as replication in
cellular models. According to the researchers, they offer a potential rapid
development path to generating PLpro-targeted therapeutics for use against
SARS-CoV-2.
“The kind of small molecules that they are developing are some of the first
that are specifically designed for this corona virus protease,” Pegan said. “Up
till now, most therapeutic work against SARS has targeted another virulence
factor, C3Lpro. This is a great start with a different target. Their hope is that they can turn this into a starting point for creating a drug that they can get in front
of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).”
The study was published in Infectious Diseases.
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