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Protocetraric and Salazinic Acids as Potential Inhibitors of SARS-CoV-2 3CL Protease: Biochemical, Cytotoxic, and Computational Characterization of Depsidones as Slow-Binding Inactivators.

Lorenza FagnaniLisaurora NazziconePierangelo BellioNicola FranceschiniDonatella TondiAndrea VerriSabrina PetriccaRoberto IorioGianfranco AmicosanteMariagrazia PerilliGiuseppe Celenza
Published in: Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The study investigated the inhibitory activity of protocetraric and salazinic acids against SARS-CoV-2 3CL pro . The kinetic parameters were determined by microtiter plate-reading fluorimeter using a fluorogenic substrate. The cytotoxic activity was tested on murine Sertoli TM4 cells. In silico analysis was performed to ascertain the nature of the binding with the 3CL pro . The compounds are slow-binding inactivators of 3CL pro with a K i of 3.95 μM and 3.77 μM for protocetraric and salazinic acid, respectively, and inhibitory efficiency k inact / K i at about 3 × 10 -5 s -1 µM -1 . The mechanism of inhibition shows that both compounds act as competitive inhibitors with the formation of a stable covalent adduct. The viability assay on epithelial cells revealed that none of them shows cytotoxicity up to 80 μM, which is well below the K i values. By molecular modelling, we predicted that the catalytic Cys145 makes a nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl carbon of the cyclic ester common to both inhibitors, forming a stably acyl-enzyme complex. The computational and kinetic analyses confirm the formation of a stable acyl-enzyme complex with 3CL pro . The results obtained enrich the knowledge of the already numerous biological activities exhibited by lichen secondary metabolites, paving the way for developing promising scaffolds for the design of cysteine enzyme inhibitors.
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