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Highly potent host-specific small-molecule inhibitor of paramyxovirus and pneumovirus replication with high resistance barrier

Authors :
Shrestha, Neeta
Gall, Flavio Max
Mathieu, Cyrille
Hierweger, Melanie Michaela
Brügger, Melanie
Alves, Marco P.
Vesin, Jonathan
Banfi, Damiano
Kalbermatter, David
Horvat, Branka
Chambon, Marc
Turcatti, Gerardo
Fotiadis, Dimitrios
Riedl, Rainer
Plattet, Philippe
Shrestha, Neeta
Gall, Flavio Max
Mathieu, Cyrille
Hierweger, Melanie Michaela
Brügger, Melanie
Alves, Marco P.
Vesin, Jonathan
Banfi, Damiano
Kalbermatter, David
Horvat, Branka
Chambon, Marc
Turcatti, Gerardo
Fotiadis, Dimitrios
Riedl, Rainer
Plattet, Philippe
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Multiple enveloped RNA viruses of the family Paramyxoviridae and Pneumoviridae, like measles virus (MeV), Nipah virus (NiV), canine distemper virus (CDV), or respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), are of high clinical relevance. Each year a huge number of lives are lost as a result of these viral infections. Worldwide, MeV infection alone is responsible for over a hundred thousand deaths each year despite available vaccine. Therefore, there is an urgent need for treatment options to counteract these viral infections. The development of antiviral drugs in general stands as a huge challenge due to the rapid emergence of viral escape mutants. Here, we disclose the discovery of a small-molecule antiviral, compound 1 (ZHAWOC9045), active against several pneumo-/paramyxoviruses, including MeV, NiV, CDV, RSV, and parainfluenza virus type 5 (PIV-5). A series of mechanistic characterizations revealed that compound 1 targets a host factor which is indispensable for viral genome replication. Drug resistance profiling against a paramyxovirus model (CDV) demonstrated no detectable adaptation despite prolonged time of investigation, thereby mitigating the rapid emergence of escape variants. Furthermore, a thorough structure-activity relationship analysis of compound 1 led to the invention of 100-times-more potent-derivatives, e.g., compound 2 (ZHAWOC21026). Collectively, we present in this study an attractive host-directed pneumoviral/paramyxoviral replication inhibitor with potential therapeutic application. IMPORTANCE Measles virus, respiratory syncytial virus, canine distemper virus, and Nipah virus are some of the clinically significant RNA viruses that threaten substantial number of lives each year. Limited to no availability of treatment options for these viral infections makes it arduous to handle the outbreaks. This highlights the major importance of developing antivirals to fight not only ongoing infections but also potential future epidemics. Most of the discovered antivira

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, mBio, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1362706893
Document Type :
Electronic Resource