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The Discovery of Small Allosteric and Active Site Inhibitors of the SARS-CoV-2 Main Protease via Structure-Based Virtual Screening and Biological Evaluation.

Radwa E MahgoubFeda E MohamedLara AlzyoudBassam R AliJuliana FerreiraWael M RabehShaikha S AlNeyadiNoor AtatrehMohammad A Ghattas
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The main protease enzyme (M pro ) of SARS-CoV-2 is one of the most promising targets for COVID-19 treatment. Accordingly, in this work, a structure-based virtual screening of 3.8 million ligand libraries was carried out. After rigorous filtering, docking, and post screening assessments, 78 compounds were selected for biological evaluation, 3 of which showed promising inhibition of the M pro enzyme. The obtained hits (CB03, GR04, and GR20) had reasonable potencies with K i values in the medium to high micromolar range. Interestingly, while our most potent hit, GR20, was suggested to act via a reversible covalent mechanism, GR04 was confirmed as a noncompetitive inhibitor that seems to be one of a kind when compared to the other allosteric inhibitors discovered so far. Moreover, all three compounds have small sizes (~300 Da) with interesting fittings in their relevant binding sites, and they possess lead-like characteristics that can introduce them as very attractive candidates for the future development of COVID-19 treatments.
Keyphrases
  • sars cov
  • small molecule
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • anti inflammatory
  • protein protein
  • coronavirus disease
  • high throughput
  • current status
  • combination therapy