Back to Search Start Over

Synthetic Heparan Sulfate Mimetic Pixatimod (PG545) Potently Inhibits SARS-CoV-2 by Disrupting the Spike-ACE2 Interaction

Authors :
Guimond, Scott E.
Mycroft-West, Courtney J.
Gandhi, Neha S.
Tree, Julia A.
Le, Thuy T.
Spalluto, C. Mirella
Humbert, Maria V.
Buttigieg, Karen R.
Coombes, Naomi
Elmore, Michael J.
Wand, Matthew
Nyström, Kristina
Said, Joanna
Setoh, Yin Xiang
Amarilla, Alberto A.
Modhiran, Naphak
Sng, Julian D.J.
Chhabra, Mohit
Young, Paul R.
Rawle, Daniel J.
Lima, Marcelo A.
Yates, Edwin A.
Karlsson, Richard
Miller, Rebecca L.
Chen, Yen Hsi
Bagdonaite, Ieva
Yang, Zhang
Stewart, James
Nguyen, Dung
Laidlaw, Stephen
Hammond, Edward
Dredge, Keith
Wilkinson, Tom M.A.
Watterson, Daniel
Khromykh, Alexander A.
Suhrbier, Andreas
Carroll, Miles W.
Trybala, Edward
Bergström, Tomas
Ferro, Vito
Skidmore, Mark A.
Turnbull, Jeremy E.
Guimond, Scott E.
Mycroft-West, Courtney J.
Gandhi, Neha S.
Tree, Julia A.
Le, Thuy T.
Spalluto, C. Mirella
Humbert, Maria V.
Buttigieg, Karen R.
Coombes, Naomi
Elmore, Michael J.
Wand, Matthew
Nyström, Kristina
Said, Joanna
Setoh, Yin Xiang
Amarilla, Alberto A.
Modhiran, Naphak
Sng, Julian D.J.
Chhabra, Mohit
Young, Paul R.
Rawle, Daniel J.
Lima, Marcelo A.
Yates, Edwin A.
Karlsson, Richard
Miller, Rebecca L.
Chen, Yen Hsi
Bagdonaite, Ieva
Yang, Zhang
Stewart, James
Nguyen, Dung
Laidlaw, Stephen
Hammond, Edward
Dredge, Keith
Wilkinson, Tom M.A.
Watterson, Daniel
Khromykh, Alexander A.
Suhrbier, Andreas
Carroll, Miles W.
Trybala, Edward
Bergström, Tomas
Ferro, Vito
Skidmore, Mark A.
Turnbull, Jeremy E.
Source :
ACS Central Science
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Heparan sulfate (HS) is a cell surface polysaccharide recently identified as a coreceptor with the ACE2 protein for the S1 spike protein on SARS-CoV-2 virus, providing a tractable new therapeutic target. Clinically used heparins demonstrate an inhibitory activity but have an anticoagulant activity and are supply-limited, necessitating alternative solutions. Here, we show that synthetic HS mimetic pixatimod (PG545), a cancer drug candidate, binds and destabilizes the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein receptor binding domain and directly inhibits its binding to ACE2, consistent with molecular modeling identification of multiple molecular contacts and overlapping pixatimod and ACE2 binding sites. Assays with multiple clinical isolates of SARS-CoV-2 virus show that pixatimod potently inhibits the infection of monkey Vero E6 cells and physiologically relevant human bronchial epithelial cells at safe therapeutic concentrations. Pixatimod also retained broad potency against variants of concern (VOC) including B.1.1.7 (Alpha), B.1.351 (Beta), B.1.617.2 (Delta), and B.1.1.529 (Omicron). Furthermore, in a K18-hACE2 mouse model, pixatimod significantly reduced SARS-CoV-2 viral titers in the upper respiratory tract and virus-induced weight loss. This demonstration of potent anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity tolerant to emerging mutations establishes proof-of-concept for targeting the HS-Spike protein-ACE2 axis with synthetic HS mimetics and provides a strong rationale for clinical investigation of pixatimod as a potential multimodal therapeutic for COVID-19.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ACS Central Science
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1343978248
Document Type :
Electronic Resource