Litcius/Paper detail

Structure of Mpro from COVID-19 virus and discovery of its inhibitors

Zhenming Jin, Xiaoyu Du, Yechun Xu, Yong‐Qiang Deng, M. Liu, Yun Zhao, Bingjie Zhang, Xuelian Li, Linman ZHANG, Chen Peng, Yinkai Duan, Jing Yu, Lu Wang, Kailin Yang, F. Liu, Ren-Di Jiang, Xing‐Lou Yang, Tian You, Xuerong Liu, Fang Bai, Hong‐Wen Liu, Luke W. Guddat, Wenqing Xu, Gengfu Xiao, Cheng‐Feng Qin, Zheng‐Li Shi, Hualiang Jiang, Zihe Rao, Haitao Yang

2020Queensland's institutional digital repository (The University of Queensland)264 citations

Abstract

A new coronavirus (CoV) identified as COVID-19 virus is the etiological agent responsible for the 2019-2020 viral pneumonia outbreak that commenced in Wuhan. Currently there are no targeted therapeutics and effective treatment options remain very limited. In order to rapidly discover lead compounds for clinical use, we initiated a program of combined structure-assisted drug design, virtual drug screening and high-throughput screening to identify new drug leads that target the COVID-19 virus main protease (M). M is a key CoV enzyme, which plays a pivotal role in mediating viral replication and transcription, making it an attractive drug target for this virus. Here, we identified a mechanism-based inhibitor, N3, by computer-aided drug design and subsequently determined the crystal structure of COVID-19 virus M in complex with this compound. Next, through a combination of structure-based virtual and high-throughput screening, we assayed over 10,000 compounds including approved drugs, drug candidates in clinical trials, and other pharmacologically active compounds as inhibitors of M. Six of these compounds inhibited M with IC values ranging from 0.67 to 21.4 μM. Ebselen also exhibited promising antiviral activity in cell-based assays. Our results demonstrate the efficacy of this screening strategy, which can lead to the rapid discovery of drug leads with clinical potential in response to new infectious diseases for which no specific drugs or vaccines are available.

Topics & Concepts

Virtual screeningDrugAntiviral drugDrug discoveryComputational biologyDruggabilityViral replicationHigh-throughput screeningVirusVirologyPharmacologyBiologyBioinformaticsBiochemistryGeneComputational Drug Discovery MethodsMosquito-borne diseases and controlSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research