Repurposing screen identifies novel candidates for broad-spectrum coronavirus antivirals and druggable host targets
Haid S, Matthaei A, Winkler M, Sake S, Gunesch A, Milke V, Köhler N, Rückert J, Vieyres G, Kühl D, Nguyen T, Göhl M, Lasswitz L, Zapatero-Belinchón F, Brogden G, Gerold G, Wiegmann B, Bilitewski U, Brown R, Brönstrup M, Schulz T, Pietschmann T
Erschienen in
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy: Volume 68, Issue 3, Page e0121023
Abstract
Libraries composed of licensed drugs represent a vast repertoire of molecules modulating physiological processes in humans, providing unique opportunities for the discovery of host-targeting antivirals. We screened the Repurposing, Focused Rescue, and Accelerated Medchem (ReFRAME) repurposing library with approximately 12,000 molecules for broad-spectrum coronavirus antivirals and discovered 134 compounds inhibiting an alphacoronavirus and mapping to 58 molecular target categories. Dominant targets included the 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor, the dopamine receptor, and cyclin-dependent kinases. Gene knock-out of the drugs' host targets including cathepsin B and L (CTSB/L; VBY-825), the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR; Phortress), the farnesyl-diphosphate farnesyltransferase 1 (FDFT1; P-3622), and the kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (KEAP1; Omaveloxolone), significantly modulated HCoV-229E infection, providing evidence that these compounds inhibited the virus through acting on their respective host targets. Counter-screening of all 134 primary compound candidates with SARS-CoV-2 and validation in primary cells identified Phortress, an AHR activating ligand, P-3622-targeting FDFT1, and Omaveloxolone, which activates the NFE2-like bZIP transcription factor 2 (NFE2L2) by liberating it from its endogenous inhibitor KEAP1, as antiviral candidates for both an Alpha- and a Betacoronavirus. This study provides an overview of HCoV-229E repurposing candidates and reveals novel potentially druggable viral host dependency factors hijacked by diverse coronaviruses.
In PubMed öffnenAutoren
Dr. Sibylle Haid
Teamleitung Respiratorische Viren

Natalie Maria Köhler
Doktorandin

Vanessa Milke
Doktorandin

Prof. Thomas Pietschmann
Institutsleiter