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

Maya MichonAndreas Müller-SchiffmannAnuradha F LingappaShao Feng YuLi DuFred DeiterSean BroceSuguna MalleshJackelyn CrabtreeUsha F LingappaAmanda MacieikLisa MüllerPhilipp Niklas OstermannMarcel AndréeOrtwin AdamsHeiner SchaalRobert J HoganRalph A TrippUmesh AppaiahSanjeev K AnandThomas W CampiMichael J FordJonathan C ReedJim LinOlayemi AkintundeKiel CopelandChristine NicholsEmma PetrouskiAna R MoreiraI-Ting JiangNicholas DeYarmanIan BrownSharon LauIlana SegalDanielle GoldsmithShi HongVinod AsundiErica M BriggsNgwe Sin PhyoMarkus FroehlichBruce OniskoKent MatlackDebendranath DeyJaisri R LingappaDharma M PrasadAnatoliy KitaygorodskyyDennis SolasHomer BousheyJohn GreenlandSatish PillaiMichael K LoJoel M MontgomeryChristina F SpiropoulouCarsten KorthSuganya SelvarajahKumar PaulvannanVishwanath R Lingappa
Published in: Open biology (2024)
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.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • protein protein
  • sars cov
  • cell free
  • respiratory syncytial virus
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • cross sectional
  • blood brain barrier
  • coronavirus disease
  • cancer therapy
  • brain injury