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Design and synthesis of naturally-inspired SARS-CoV-2 inhibitors.

Haitham HassanJeanne ChiaravalliAfnan HassanLoay BeddaTim KrischunsKuang-Yu ChenAlice Shi Ming LiAdrien DelpalEtienne DecrolyMasoud VedadiNadia NaffakhFabrice AgouSergio MallartReem K ArafaPaola Barbara Arimondo
Published in: RSC medicinal chemistry (2023)
A naturally inspired chemical library of 25 molecules was synthesised guided by 3-D dimensionality and natural product likeness factors to explore a new chemical space. The synthesised chemical library, consisting of fused-bridged dodecahydro-2 a ,6-epoxyazepino[3,4,5- c , d ]indole skeletons, followed lead likeness factors in terms of molecular weight, C-sp 3 fraction and Clog  P . Screening of the 25 compounds against lung cells infected with SARS-CoV-2 led to the identification of 2 hits. Although the chemical library showed cytotoxicity, the two hits (3b, 9e) showed the highest antiviral activity (EC 50 values of 3.7 and 1.4 μM, respectively) with an acceptable cytotoxicity difference. Computational analysis based on docking and molecular dynamics simulations against main protein targets in SARS-CoV-2 (main protease M pro , nucleocapsid phosphoprotein, non-structural protein nsp10-nsp16 complex and RBD/ACE2 complex) were performed. The computational analysis proposed the possible binding targets to be either M pro or the nsp10-nsp16 complex. Biological assays were performed to confirm this proposition. A cell-based assay for M pro protease activity using a reverse-nanoluciferase (Rev-Nluc) reporter confirmed that 3b targets M pro . These results open the way towards further hit-to-lead optimisations.
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