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A pan-respiratory antiviral chemotype targeting a transient host multi-protein complex

Authors :
Maya Michon
Andreas Müller-Schiffmann
Anuradha F. Lingappa
Shao Feng Yu
Li Du
Fred Deiter
Sean Broce
Suguna Mallesh
Jackelyn Crabtree
Usha F. Lingappa
Amanda Macieik
Lisa Müller
Philipp Niklas Ostermann
Marcel Andrée
Ortwin Adams
Heiner Schaal
Robert J. Hogan
Ralph A. Tripp
Umesh Appaiah
Sanjeev K. Anand
Thomas W. Campi
Michael J. Ford
Jonathan C. Reed
Jim Lin
Olayemi Akintunde
Kiel Copeland
Christine Nichols
Emma Petrouski
Ana R. Moreira
I-ting Jiang
Nicholas DeYarman
Ian Brown
Sharon Lau
Ilana Segal
Danielle Goldsmith
Shi Hong
Vinod Asundi
Erica M. Briggs
Ngwe Sin Phyo
Markus Froehlich
Bruce Onisko
Kent Matlack
Debendranath Dey
Jaisri R. Lingappa
Dharma M. Prasad
Anatoliy Kitaygorodskyy
Dennis Solas
Homer Boushey
John Greenland
Satish Pillai
Michael K. Lo
Joel M. Montgomery
Christina F. Spiropoulou
Carsten Korth
Suganya Selvarajah
Kumar Paulvannan
Vishwanath R. Lingappa
Source :
Open Biology, Vol 14, Iss 6 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
The Royal Society, 2024.

Abstract

We present a novel small molecule antiviral chemotype that was identified by an unconventional cell-free protein synthesis and assembly-based phenotypic screen for modulation of viral capsid assembly. Activity of PAV-431, a representative compound from the series, has been validated against infectious viruses in multiple cell culture models for all six families of viruses causing most respiratory diseases in humans. In animals, this chemotype has been demonstrated efficacious for porcine epidemic diarrhoea virus (a coronavirus) and respiratory syncytial virus (a paramyxovirus). PAV-431 is shown to bind to the protein 14-3-3, a known allosteric modulator. However, it only appears to target the small subset of 14-3-3 which is present in a dynamic multi-protein complex whose components include proteins implicated in viral life cycles and in innate immunity. The composition of this target multi-protein complex appears to be modified upon viral infection and largely restored by PAV-431 treatment. An advanced analog, PAV-104, is shown to be selective for the virally modified target, thereby avoiding host toxicity. Our findings suggest a new paradigm for understanding, and drugging, the host–virus interface, which leads to a new clinical therapeutic strategy for treatment of respiratory viral disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20462441
Volume :
14
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Open Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b895c6ab92c405ab16479c74bcf64ea
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsob.230363