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Targeting SARS-CoV-2 Nsp3 macrodomain structure with insights from human poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG) structures with inhibitors.

Authors :
Brosey, Chris A.
Houl, Jerry H.
Katsonis, Panagiotis
Balapiti-Modarage, Lakshitha P.F.
Bommagani, Shobanbabu
Arvai, Andy
Moiani, Davide
Bacolla, Albino
Link, Todd
Warden, Leslie S.
Lichtarge, Olivier
Jones, Darin E.
Ahmed, Zamal
Tainer, John A.
Source :
Progress in Biophysics & Molecular Biology. Aug2021, Vol. 163, p171-186. 16p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Arrival of the novel SARS-CoV-2 has launched a worldwide effort to identify both pre-approved and novel therapeutics targeting the viral proteome, highlighting the urgent need for efficient drug discovery strategies. Even with effective vaccines, infection is possible, and at-risk populations would benefit from effective drug compounds that reduce the lethality and lasting damage of COVID-19 infection. The CoV-2 MacroD-like macrodomain (Mac1) is implicated in viral pathogenicity by disrupting host innate immunity through its mono (ADP-ribosyl) hydrolase activity, making it a prime target for antiviral therapy. We therefore solved the structure of CoV-2 Mac1 from non-structural protein 3 (Nsp3) and applied structural and sequence-based genetic tracing, including newly determined A. pompejana MacroD2 and GDAP2 amino acid sequences, to compare and contrast CoV-2 Mac1 with the functionally related human DNA-damage signaling factor poly (ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG). Previously, identified targetable features of the PARG active site allowed us to develop a pharmacologically useful PARG inhibitor (PARGi). Here, we developed a focused chemical library and determined 6 novel PARGi X-ray crystal structures for comparative analysis. We applied this knowledge to discovery of CoV-2 Mac1 inhibitors by combining computation and structural analysis to identify PARGi fragments with potential to bind the distal-ribose and adenosyl pockets of the CoV-2 Mac1 active site. Scaffold development of these PARGi fragments has yielded two novel compounds, PARG-345 and PARG-329, that crystallize within the Mac1 active site, providing critical structure-activity data and a pathway for inhibitor optimization. The reported structural findings demonstrate ways to harness our PARGi synthesis and characterization pipeline to develop CoV-2 Mac1 inhibitors targeting the ADP-ribose active site. Together, these structural and computational analyses reveal a path for accelerating development of antiviral therapeutics from pre-existing drug optimization pipelines. • Sequence and evolutionary analyses show CoV-2 macrodomain 1 (Mac1) shares active site homology with human PARG macrodomain. • Virtual screening of CoV-2 Mac1 with JA2131 PARGi reveals morpholine and phenyl fragments targeting the distal ribose site. • Scaffold optimization of VHTS PARGi fragments yields PARG-345 and PARG-329, which engage the full CoV-2 Mac1 active site. • Rationale PARGi scaffold optimization is a strategy to target CoV-2 Mac1 efficiently with pre-existing inhibitor libraries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00796107
Volume :
163
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Progress in Biophysics & Molecular Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150620557
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2021.02.002