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Therapeutic targeting of coronavirus spike glycoprotein priming

Authors :
Alex Y. Strongin
Luca Gambini
Carlo Baggio
Maurizio Pellecchia
Sergey A. Shiryaev
Elisa Barile
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Processing of certain viral proteins and bacterial toxins by host serine proteases is a frequent and critical step in virulence. The coronavirus spike glycoprotein contains three (S1, S2, and S2’) cleavage sites that are processed by human host proteases. The exact nature of these cleavage sites, and their respective processing proteases, can determine whether the virus can cross species, and the level of pathogenicity. Recent comparisons of the genomes of the highly pathogenic SARS-CoV2 and MERS-CoV, with less pathogenic strains (e.g., Bat-RaTG13, the bat homologue of SARS-CoV2) identified possible mutations in the receptor binding domain and in the S1 and S2’ cleavage sites of their spike glycoprotein. However there remains some confusion on the relative roles of the possible serine-proteases involved for priming. Using anthrax toxin as a model system, we show that in vivo inhibition of priming by pan-active serine protease inhibitors can be effective at suppressing virulence. Hence, our studies should encourage further efforts in developing either pan-serine protease inhibitors or inhibitor cocktails to target SARS-CoV2 and potentially ward off future pandemics that could develop because of the additional mutations in the S-protein priming sequence in coronaviruses.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7ee25bf90d8cccdb5ea8e8a7ef898879
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-22208/v1