Author: Ballout, Rami A.; Sviridov, Dmitri; Bukrinsky, Michael I.; Remaley, Alan T.
Title: The lysosome: A potential juncture between SARSâ€CoVâ€2 infectivity and Niemannâ€Pick disease type C, with therapeutic implications Cord-id: 5t1mefcs Document date: 2020_5_5
ID: 5t1mefcs
Snippet: Drug repurposing is potentially the fastest available option in the race to identify safe and efficacious drugs that can be used to prevent and/or treat COVIDâ€19. By describing the life cycle of the newly emergent coronavirus, SARSâ€CoVâ€2, in light of emerging data on the therapeutic efficacy of various repurposed antimicrobials undergoing testing against the virus, we highlight in this review a possible mechanistic convergence between some of these tested compounds. Specifically, we propos
Document: Drug repurposing is potentially the fastest available option in the race to identify safe and efficacious drugs that can be used to prevent and/or treat COVIDâ€19. By describing the life cycle of the newly emergent coronavirus, SARSâ€CoVâ€2, in light of emerging data on the therapeutic efficacy of various repurposed antimicrobials undergoing testing against the virus, we highlight in this review a possible mechanistic convergence between some of these tested compounds. Specifically, we propose that the lysosomotropic effects of hydroxychloroquine and several other drugs undergoing testing may be responsible for their demonstrated in vitro antiviral activities against COVIDâ€19. Moreover, we propose that Niemannâ€Pick disease type C (NPC), a lysosomal storage disorder, may provide new insights into potential future therapeutic targets for SARSâ€CoVâ€2, by highlighting key established features of the disorder that together result in an “unfavorable†host cellular environment that may interfere with viral propagation. Our reasoning evolves from previous biochemical and cell biology findings related to NPC, coupled with the rapidly evolving data on COVIDâ€19. Our overall aim is to suggest that pharmacological interventions targeting lysosomal function in general, and those particularly capable of reversibly inducing transient NPCâ€like cellular and biochemical phenotypes, constitute plausible mechanisms that could be used to therapeutically target COVIDâ€19.
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