Author: Steuten, Kas; Kim, Heeyoung; Widen, John C.; Babin, Brett M.; Onguka, Ouma; Lovell, Scott; Bolgi, Oguz; Cerikan, Berati; Cortese, Mirko; Muir, Ryan K.; Bennett, John M.; Geiss-Friedlander, Ruth; Peters, Christoph; Bartenschlager, Ralf; Bogyo, Matthew
                    Title: Challenges for targeting SARS-CoV-2 proteases as a therapeutic strategy for COVID-19  Cord-id: g5ugrmax  Document date: 2020_11_23
                    ID: g5ugrmax
                    
                    Snippet: Two proteases produced by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, Mpro and PLpro, are essential for viral replication and have become the focus of drug development programs for treatment of COVID-19. We screened a highly focused library of compounds containing covalent warheads designed to target cysteine proteases to identify new lead scaffolds for both Mpro and PLpro proteases. These efforts identified a small number of hits for the Mpro protease and no viable hits for the PLpro protease. Of the Mpro hits ident
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: Two proteases produced by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, Mpro and PLpro, are essential for viral replication and have become the focus of drug development programs for treatment of COVID-19. We screened a highly focused library of compounds containing covalent warheads designed to target cysteine proteases to identify new lead scaffolds for both Mpro and PLpro proteases. These efforts identified a small number of hits for the Mpro protease and no viable hits for the PLpro protease. Of the Mpro hits identified as inhibitors of the purified recombinant protease, only two compounds inhibited viral infectivity in cellular infection assays. However, we observed a substantial drop in antiviral potency upon expression of TMPRSS2, a transmembrane serine protease that acts in an alternative viral entry pathway to the lysosomal cathepsins. This loss of potency is explained by the fact that our lead Mpro inhibitors are also potent inhibitors of host cell cysteine cathepsins. To determine if this is a general property of Mpro inhibitors, we evaluated several recently reported compounds and found that they are also effective inhibitors of purified human cathepsin L and B and showed similar loss in activity in cells expressing TMPRSS2. Our results highlight the challenges of targeting Mpro and PLpro proteases and demonstrate the need to carefully assess selectivity of SARS-CoV-2 protease inhibitors to prevent clinical advancement of compounds that function through inhibition of a redundant viral entry pathway.
 
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