115 other peptides were not hydrolysed by ACE2 including
adrenocorticotrophic hormone, calcitonin, cholecystokinin,
met-enkephalin, glucagon, glucagon-like peptide-1, melanin-concentrating
hormone, pituitary adenylyl cyclase-activating polypeptide,
somatastatin-14, urocortin or vasoactive polypeptide (Vickers et
al. , 2002).
In humans, levels of mRNA encoding ACE2, together with immunoreactive
peptide, are highest in the gastrointestinal tract, followed by heart,
kidney, testes and gall bladder and other tissues (Uhlen et al., 2015).
Within organs, ACE2 immunoreactivity was predominantly localised to
epithelial (for example, in the lungs) and endothelial cells from all
vascular beds examined (Yang et al., 2017). Importantly, the ACE2
antisera used in this study for immunocytochemistry was the same as that
employed in the study described in the section below “Using
biopharmaceutical/antibody approaches to target ACE2:Spike
interactions” (Hoffmann et al. , 2020), to block entry of the
virus in cell culture. The epitope for this antisera would be a rational
starting point for the development of selective therapeutic antibodies.
The presence of ACE2 on airway epithelial cells is consistent with the
isolation of SARS-CoV-2 from broncho-alveolar lavage of patients with
COVID-19 and the infection of cultured airway epithelial cells (Zhuet al. , 2020). In humans, levels of ACE2 immunoreactivity tends
to be low. However, in addition to being upregulated by ACE inhibitors
and angiotensin receptor antagonists (see above), ACE2 expression has
been reported to be increased in human cardiovascular disease, for
example, in the cardiomyopathic heart (Zisman et al. , 2003).
Since ACE2 is critical for viral entry, it may be one explanation for
the high incidence of co-morbidity of COVID-19 patients with
cardiovascular disease.
Manipulation of ACE2 activity by synthetic
agents
Assays employing fluorogenic surrogate substrates to screen for
inhibitors of ACE2 activity are well-established, for example using
methoxycoumarin-RPPGFSAFK(Dnp)-OH (Ocaranza et al. , 2006; Bennionet al. , 2016), or methoxycoumarin-APK(Dnp)OH (Herath et
al. , 2007; Lew et al. , 2008; Mores et al. , 2008).
Detailed protocols for the use of methoxycoumarin-APK(Dnp)OH have been
described for FRET-based high throughput screening (Sriramula et
al. , 2017; Xiao and Burns, 2017).
This style of assay identified that ACE2 was not inhibited in the
presence of 10 µM lisinopril, enalaprilat, or captopril, inhibitors of
angiotensin-converting
enzyme (Tipnis et al. , 2000), and there are no licensed drugs
described to inhibit ACE2 activity. However, DX600 is a peptide-based
ACE2 inhibitor (Huang et al. , 2003), while MLN4760 and compound
28 are described as sub-nanomolar potency ACE2 inhibitors (Moreset al. , 2008).
There is evidence for allosteric regulation of ACE2 activity, in that a
xanthenone derivative
(XNT)
was observed to enhance ACE2, but not ACE, activity in
vitro with a potency of 20 µM (Hernandez Prada et al. , 2008). Anin silico study later identified a binding site in an allosteric
hinge region of ACE2, distinct from the proteinase active site, against
which 1217 FDA-approved drugs were screened (Kulemina and Ostrov, 2011).
A subsequent kinetic assay with the recombinant enzyme and a fluorigenic
substrate identified
labetalol
and
diminazene
as agents able to double the maximal velocity of ACE2 enzyme activity.
Whether any of these compounds alter the binding of the spike protein
from either SARS-CoV or SARS-CoV-2 or viral infection in general does
not appear to have been examined yet.
A further speculative area that should be explored further is the
concept of enhancing the activity of the serine proteinase ADAM17 to
increase cleavage and release of membrane bound ACE2. Peptides such as
angiotensin II are reported in animal models to cause release
(‘shedding’) following binding to AT1 receptors (Xuet al. , 2017). Although angiotensin II is licensed by the Federal
Drug Administration to treat sepsis (known as Giapreza, Davenportet al. , 2020), it would be inadvisable as a treatment for
COVID-19 given the detrimental action of angiotensin II on the lungs. In
contrast, the investigational agent
[Pyr1]-apelin-13 is currently used in clinical
studies (Davenport et al. , 2020) and may also interact with its
cognate receptor to downregulate membrane expressed ACE2. This peptide
also has beneficial effects on the heart, including an increase in
cardiac output (Japp et al. , 2010).
Using biopharmaceutical/antibody approaches to target
ACE2:Spike
interactions
An alternative approach to the small molecule manipulation of the ACE2
enzyme would be to target the spike or ACE2 proteins with selective
antibodies. Antibodies directed against ACE2 led to a reduction in
SARS-CoV-2 virus entry into target cells (Hoffmann et al. , 2020),
although this is likely to be some distance away from a therapeutic
application.
A truncated version of human recombinant ACE2, lacking the transmembrane
domain, mitigated against SARS-CoV infection of cells (Li et al. ,
2003) and has been used in animal models to reduce symptoms of severe
acute lung failure (Imai et al. , 2005), diabetic nephropathy
(Oudit et al. , 2010) and cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis (Zhonget al. , 2010). Treating COVID-19 victims with a soluble form of
ACE2 (Batlle et al. , 2020) or a fusion protein of the
spike-binding portion of ACE2 combined with the Fc portion of human IgG
(Lei et al. , 2020) has been suggested.
Apeiron Biologics has approval to conduct a Phase II clinical trial of
APN01 (human recombinant ACE2) for the treatment of COVID-19 in three
European countries (Austria, Germany and Denmark)
(NCT04335136).
This recombinant version of ACE2 was originally licensed to
GlaxoSmithKline and previously tested as GSK2586881 in a Phase 2
multicentre trial
(NCT01597635)
in patients with lung injury or ARDS, both features of SARS and MERS
(and now COVID-19). The study tested the hypothesis that cleavage of
angiotensin II (which causes lung injury - vasoconstriction,
inflammation, fibrosis, vascular leak, and sodium absorption) to
angiotensin-(1-7), would have counter regulatory beneficial action and
reduce long term injury. GSK2586881 was well-tolerated in patients with
ARDS, and the rapid modulation of peptides of the renin-angiotensin
system demonstrated target engagement, in that levels of angiotensin II
decreased rapidly whereas angiotensin-(1-7) levels increased and
remained elevated for 48 h, although the study was not powered to detect
changes in acute physiology or clinical outcomes (Khan et al., 2017).
Sera from convalescent SARS-CoV patients prevented the cell entry of
SARS-CoV-2 (Hoffmann et al. , 2020) and this approach has been
used with some success in the SARS, MERS and COVID-19 outbreaks (for
review, see Bloch et al. , 2020). The difficulty in identifying
the precise molecular mechanism/s of convalescent sera action and issues
with collection, standardization and scaling-up will be a challenge
(Bloch et al. , 2020).
A bacterial equivalent of ACE2 (based on 3D structure rather than
primary sequence) termed B38-CAP has been described, which is reported
to reduce hypertension and limit cardiac dysfunction in an animal model
(Minato et al. , 2020). Whether this agent might provide a decoy
anchor to ‘chelate’ viral particles prior to infection has not been
investigated.
The cell-surface priming mechanism -
TMPRSS2
The TMPRSS2 gene encodes a cell-surface proteinase (transmembrane
serine protease 2,
TMPRSS2)
and is located at chromosomal locus 21q22.3 in close proximity toERG , a gene encoding an ETS transcription factor
(Link to UniProt,
Paoloni-Giacobino et al. , 1997). (ERG fusion withEWS leads to Ewing’s sarcoma) Fusion of the TMPRSS2 andERG (or the related ETV1 ) genes has been reported to occur
in the majority of prostate cancers and is suggested to lead to an
androgen-dependent amplification of ETS-regulated genes (Tomlinset al. , 2005). TMPRSS2 expression is androgen-regulated (Linet al. , 1999; Chen et al. , 2019); it is expressed highly
in prostate cancer (Lin et al. , 1999; Lucas et al. , 2008)
(for review, see Tanabe and List, 2017) and loss of TMPRSS2 in the
prostate is associated with reduced metastatic potential (Lucas et
al. , 2014). In aggressive versions of prostate cancer, TMPRSS2
undergoes autocatalytic proteolysis at
Arg255-Ile256 (Afar et al. ,
2001), where the two chains may remain in combination due to interchain
disulphide bridges (Chen et al. , 2010) or the catalytic moiety
may be secreted (Chen et al. , 2010). In LNCaP human prostate
cancer cells, the PPARα agonist fenofibrate was able to mitigate against
the androgen receptor agonist-evoked increase in TMPRSS2 expression
(Zhao et al. , 2013).
Following binding of the coronavirus to ACE2, TMPRSS2 ‘primes’ the spike
protein to facilitate entry of the virus into the target cell (Hoffmannet al. , 2020; Matsuyama et al. , 2020). TMPRSS2 is a single
transmembrane domain protein with a calcium-binding LDL receptor class A
domain and an extracellular serine proteinase domain, which appears to
cleave substrates preferentially at basic residues (arg/lys)
(Paoloni-Giacobino et al. , 1997). Pathogenesis of two strains of
influenza virus has been reported to be markedly diminished by gene
disruption of tmprss2 in mice (Hatesuer et al. , 2013;
Tarnow et al. , 2014), inferring that targeting this enzyme may
have antiviral potential.
Interfering with the TMPRSS2:Spike
interaction
Using immunohistochemical responses (Bertram et al. , 2012) and,
very recently, using single nuclei and single cell RNA sequencing
(Lukassen et al. , 2020), as yet not peer reviewed) of lung
samples from otherwise healthy subjects, ACE2 and TMPRSS2 were shown to
be co-expressed in human bronchial epithelial cells, which could be a
nexus for primary infection.
By analogy with the previous consideration of ACE2 (above), alternatives
to manipulate TMPRSS2 activity would be to provide endogenous substrates
or synthetic inhibitors. However, the potential to make use of
endogenous substrates seems limited. Thus, although TMPRSS2 has been
described to hydrolyse and activate the cell-surface G protein-coupled
receptor
proteinase-activated
receptor 2 (Wilson et al. , 2005), mice lacking tmprss2failed to display an overt phenotype (Kim et al. , 2006).
As with ACE2, there are no reports of licensed drugs which inhibit
TMPRSS2 activity. Cbz-GGR-aminomethylcoumarin has been described as a
surrogate fluorogenic substrate suitable for high-throughput screening
(Paszti-Gere et al. , 2016), although it is also a substrate for
other proteinases, such as chymotrypsin. I432, a 3-amidinophenylalanine,
has been described as a high affinity selective inhibitor (compound 92,
Ki of 0.9 nM) of TMPRSS2 (Meyer et al. , 2013). In
IPEC-J2 pig jejunal epithelial cells, 10-50 µM I432 reduced
TMPRSS2-derived product in cell media (Paszti-Gere et al. , 2016).
In an investigation of SARS-CoV entry into HeLa cells expressing
recombinant ACE2 and TMPRSS2, a number of serine proteinase inhibitors
(benzamidine,
aprotinin,
gabexate,
tosyl lysyl chloromethyl ketone and
camostat)
were tested (mostly) at 10 µM for 30 min before exposure to pseudotyped
viruses. Only camostat was effective at reducing viral entry (Kawaseet al. , 2012), and further experiment suggested that 1 µM
camostat was also effective, but only when TMPRSS2 was expressed. At 10
and 50 µM, camostat inhibited cell entry of the SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2
spike protein (Hoffmann et al. , 2020). A direct inhibition of
TMPRSS2 activity appears not to have been reported for camostat.
Potential ancillary proteins for virus
entry - B0AT1/SLC6A19 and
B0AT3/SLC6A18
The SLC6 family of transporters includes the well-characterised NET,
SERT and DAT monoamine transporters, as well as the less well-exploited
neutral
amino acid transporter subfamily. B0AT1/SLC6A19 and
B0AT3/SLC6A18 allow sodium- and chloride-dependent
accumulation of neutral, aliphatic amino acids at the apical membranes
of epithelial cells in the small intestine
(B0AT1/SLC6A19) and kidney
(B0AT1/SLC6A19 and B0AT3/SLC6A18)
(for review, see Broer and Gether, 2012).
B0AT3/SLC6A18 is also highly expressed in the GI tract
and gall bladder
(Protein
Atlas) and may play a role in the faecal:oral transmission of
coronavirus (Yeo et al. , 2020). The cell-surface expression of
these neutral amino acid transporters is dependent on co-expression of
ACE2 (Kowalczuk et al. , 2008; Fairweather et al. , 2012),
aminopeptidase
N (CD-13, Fairweather et al. , 2012) or collectrin (an adaptor
protein, which has high homology to the transmembrane region of ACE2,
Camargo et al. , 2009,
Link to UniProt), in an
apparently tissue-dependent manner (Kuba et al. , 2010). A recent
cryo-EM structure suggested that ACE2 and
B0AT1/SLC6A19 form a heterodimer which pairs up
through interfaces between the two ACE2 partners, with the RBD of
SARS-CoV-2 spike protein binding to the peptidase active site of ACE2
(Yan et al. , 2020) suggesting that
B0AT1/SLC6A19 may facilitate entry of the novel
coronavirus.
Interfering with the neutral amino acid
transporters
Assays for B0AT1/SLC6A19 and
B0AT3/SLC6A18 tend to be traditional accumulation of
amino acids that were labelled with ionising or stable isotopes.
Recently, a primary screen using a fluorescence-based membrane
potential-based assay was used and followed up with a stable isotope
accumulation assay to identify a novel inhibitor,
cinromide,
which exhibited modest potency (0.3-0.4 µM) for inhibiting
B0AT1/SLC6A19 in cell-based assays (Danthi et
al. , 2019).
Targetting viral uncoating and
replication
Viral uncoating
Once inside the cell, the endosomal cysteine proteases
cathepsin
B and
cathepsin
L have been described to process SARS-CoV (Simmons et al. , 2005)
and this appears to be maintained for SARS-CoV-2 (Hoffmann et
al. , 2020) although the significance of such intracellular proteinase
activity is unclear. Potent inhibitors for these two proteinases have
been reported as pharmacological probes, but there are no licensed drugs
identified to target them.
Following entry into the cell, many viruses accumulate in acidified
lysosome-like vesicles, and so weak bases (including ammonium chloride
and chloroquine) which target the lysosome have been used in
vitro to target this mechanism. Ammonium chloride (at 20 mM) has been
described as a non-specific inhibitor of viral replication in
vitro , targeting viral uncoating (Mizzen et al. , 1985) and, at
50 mM, ammonium chloride inhibited cell entry of both SARS-CoV and
SARS-CoV-2 (Hoffmann et al. , 2020). Chloroquine was also observed
to reduce infection of L cells by the coronavirus mouse hepatitis virus
3 (Krzystyniak and Dupuy, 1984).
Viral replication
Following entry into the cell, the virus subverts nucleotide, protein,
lipid and carbohydrate turnover of the host cell to produce multiple
copies of itself. The viral RNA is translated into multiple proteins to
produce the replication machinery. As protein translation from the viral
genome occurs, the two polyproteins are the first to be synthesised,
with the two intrinsic proteases able to cleave the polyproteins into
their constituent products.
Targetting the viral
proteinases
The low sequence similarities between mammalian and viral proteases has
allowed successful drug targetting of viral diseases, including both
HIV/AIDS and HCV/hepatitis C. The genome of SARS-CoV-2 contains two
proteinases intrinsic to the polyproteins, PLpro and
3CLpro.
The papain-like proteinase,
PLpro
The more N -terminally-located PLpro is the larger
(~2000 aa) of the two proteins (for review, see
Baez-Santos et al. , 2015; Lei et al. , 2018), and, in
SARS-CoV, is a membrane-associated, polyfunctional entity (Harcourtet al. , 2004). Sequence modelling of SARS-CoV-2
PLpro suggested the presence of 6TM domains towards the
C terminus, with the majority of the protein extending into the cell
cytoplasm (Angeletti et al. , 2020). In other coronaviruses, the
enzyme is also capable of hydrolysing ubiquitin from protein substrates
(Barretto et al. , 2005; Ratia et al. , 2006), as well as
removing the ubiquitin-like protein interferon-stimulated gene 15 (ISG,
Link to UniProt) from
ISG-conjugated proteins (Yang et al. , 2014). Using the
orthologous proteinase from the mouse hepatitis coronavirus, analysis of
three distinct structural domains suggested that the papain-like
proteinase domain coincided with the deubiquitinylating and deISGylating
functions (Chen et al. , 2015). In SARS-CoV, the
PLpro also contains an ADRP functional phosphatase
domain directed at ADP-ribose-1”-phosphates, although the functional
significance of the hydrolase activity may be less impactful than the
capacity to bind ADP-ribose, at least for the enzyme from HCoV-229E
(Putics et al. , 2005). This domain is thought to contribute to
processing of the viral subgenomic RNAs and the suppression of the
innate immune system through reducing interferon production (Leiet al. , 2018).
Investigating the peptidase activity of SARS-CoV PLpro suggested a
preference for larger proteins (ubiquitinated or ISGylated) rather than
simpler fluorescent-tagged oligopeptide substrates (Lindner et
al. , 2005; Lindner et al. , 2007; Ratia et al. , 2014
Baez-Santos et al. , 2014) making screening more complicated.
The chymotrypsin-like proteinase,
3CLpro
The smaller proteinase from SARS-CoV-2 is 3CLpro(sometimes called the main prote(in)ase, Mpro). In
silico docking models of SARS-CoV-2 3CLpro has led to
suggestions that particular existing antiviral agents, including
velpatasvir and ledipasvir (licensed agents for treating hepatitis C
when combined with sofosbuvir in the UK), should be screened for
functional activity (Chen et al. , 2020). A recent screen of
~10,000 compounds including approved drugs, candidate
drugs and natural products used a substrate derived from theN -terminal autocleavage site of the SARS-CoV-2
3CLpro which was modified
(methylcoumarinylacetyl-AVLQSGFR-Lys(Dnp)-Lys-NH2) to
allow a FRET-based assay (Jin et al. , 2020). The same substrate
was used in a screen of the equivalent enzyme from another coronavirus,
HCoV-HKU1, which transferred to humans (Zhao et al. , 2008).
A number of inhibitors of the SARS-CoV 3CLpro proteinase
have been described (Lu et al. , 2006; Yang et al. , 2006;
Goetz et al. , 2007), without progressing into the clinic.
Recently, an in silico approach using orthologues of the SARS-SoC
3CLpro from other coronaviruses and enteroviruses
allowed production and testing in vitro of a series of α-ketamides
(Zhang et al., 2020). One compound
(11r)
exhibited submicromolar potency against SARS-CoV 3CLproin a cell-free FRET-based assay, and micromolar potency in a cell
infection assay with SARS-CoV (Zhang et al., 2020).
In a preliminary (not yet peer-reviewed) report, the SARS-CoV-2
3CLpro expressed in HEK293 cells was found to interact
with histone deacetylase 2
(HDAC2)
by affinity purification/mass spectrometry (Gordon et al. , 2020).
A number of approved drugs target HDAC2 in the treatment of various T
cell lymphomas, including
romidepsin,
belinostat,
and
vorinostat
with nanomolar potency (Bradner et al. , 2010).
Targetting nucleotide
turnover
A relatively large proportion of the viral genome is inevitably devoted
to nucleotide turnover. For SARS-CoV-2, this includes nsp7/nsp8/nsp12 as
an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase; nsp13 as a helicase; nsp10/nsp14 as an
3’-to-5’ exonuclease complex; nsp15 as an endoribonuclease and nsp16 as
a 2’-O-ribose methyltransferase.
Remdesivir
(currently in clinical trials to treat COVID-19), is described as a
non-selective inhibitor of multiple RNA viruses, and has shown some
efficacy in MERS-CoV and SARS-CoV infection of monkeys (de Wit et
al. , 2020). In in vitro investigations, the triphosphate
analogue of remdesivir inhibited RNA synthesis of MERS-CoV RNA-dependent
RNA polymerase (primarily nsp8/nsp12 complexes derived from
co-expression in insect cells of a construct containing nsp5, nsp7, nsp8
and nsp12) with an IC50 value of 32 nM when nucleotide
levels were low, increasing to 690 nM at higher nucleotide
concentrations (Gordon et al. , 2020). In silico modelling
identified that remdesivir, as well as the approved antiviral drugs
ribavirin,
sofosbuvir
and tenofovir could bind tightly to the active site of nsp12 from
SARS-CoV-2, based on the crystal structure of SARS-CoV (Elfiky, 2020).
However, ribavirin alone had no significant effect in a clinical trial
with SARS victims, although combination of ribavirin with
lopinavir-ritonavir and corticosterone had lower rating of ARDS and
death (for review, see Zumla et al. , 2016). In-depth analysis has
not been completed with MERS patients, although an ongoing Phase 2
clinical trial for MERS using a combination therapy of
lopinavir/ritonavir and interferon β1b (Arabi et al. , 2020).
Nsp13 is a helicase, which enables unwinding of duplex RNA. The
exoribonuclease activity of nsp 14 sets the coronaviruses apart (Snijderet al. , 2003), as the enzyme is suggested to remove damaging
mutations from the genome (Eckerle et al. , 2010; Sevajol et
al. , 2014). In other coronaviruses, the endoribonuclease nsp15 has some
selectivity for hydrolysing polyU sequences (Hackbart et al. ,
2020). This enables the virus to delay or minimise initiation of the
innate immune system by hydrolysing negative sense polyU nucleotides,
which activate the MDA5 system to evoke interferon production (discussed
further below). Nsp16 is a methyltransferase, which uses
S-adenosyl-L-methionine as a co-substrate to assist in cap formation
(Decroly et al. , 2008).
Protein: protein interactions in recombinant
expression
In a preliminary (not yet peer reviewed) report, a series of tagged
recombinant proteins from SARS-CoV-2 were expressed in HEK293 cells and
then protein partners were identified by affinity purification/mass
spectrometry (Gordon et al. , 2020). For nsp12 (RNA-dependent RNA
polymerase) and nsp14 (3’-5’-exonuclease) of SARS-CoV-2, interactions
with receptor interacting protein kinase 1
(RIPK1)
and inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase 2
(IMPDH2),
respectively, were identified. For these two targets, there are
established approved drugs. Thus,
ponatinib,
which is used to treat acute myelogenous leukemia or chronic myelogenous
leukemia (Philadelphia chromosome), targets multiple protein kinases,
inhibiting RIPK1 with an IC50 value of 12 nM (Najjaret al. , 2015).
Mycophenolic
acid and
ribavirin
are IMPDH2 inhibitors with IC50 values of 20 nM (Nelsonet al. , 1990) and 1-3 µM (Wittine et al. , 2012) ranges,
respectively, with clinical uses in organ transplantation and antiviral
therapy, respectively.
Reservations about the use of ribavirin have already been noted above.
Mycophenolic acid as a monotherapy was examined in a MER-CoV-infected
non-human primate model, where the authors concluded it actually
worsened the condition (Chan et al. , 2015).
Nsp13 (helicase) and nsp15 (endoribonuclease) have been described to
bind to centrosome-associated protein 250
(CEP250) and RNF41 (also
known as NRDP1, Link to
UniProt), respectively, in a preliminary report of recombinant
expression (Gordon et al. , 2020). CEP250 is suggested to
influence centrosome cohesion during interphase (de Castro-Miro et
al. , 2016) and to be elevated in peripheral T cell lymphomas (Cooperet al. , 2011). The functional relevance of nsp13 interaction with
CEP250 is not yet clear. RNF41 is an E3 ubiquitin ligase, which
polyubiquitinates myeloid differentiating primary response gene 88
(MyD88, link to UniProt),
an adaptor protein for
Toll-like
receptors, which allows activation of TBK1 and IRF3 (see below) and
thereby increases type I interferon production (Wang et al. ,
2009).
Targetting phospholipid
turnover
The lipid profile of viruses appears to be important in terms of viral
entry into the cell, either as sites for anchoring or for endocytosis
(for review, see Heaton and Randall, 2011; Mazzon and Mercer, 2014).
Replication of SARS-CoV is reported to take place associated with the
endoplasmic reticulum in ‘replicative organelles’ incorporating
convoluted membranes and interconnected double-membrane vesicles,
inferring a capacity for the virus to induce extensive reorganization of
intracellular phospholipid membranes (Knoops et al. , 2008). Three
non-structural proteins from SARS-CoV with transmembrane domains, nsp3
PLpro (see above), nsp4 and nsp6 when co-expressed in
model cells prompted the formation of these double-membrane vesicles
(Angelini et al. , 2013), although it is unclear whether specific
catalytic activities are necessary for this action.
The lipidome of influenza virus (also a positive strand RNA virus)
consists of glycerophospholipids, sterols (mainly cholesterol) and
sphingolipids with sphingolipids and cholesterol enriched compared to
the host cell membrane (Gerl et al. , 2012), but there does not
yet appear to be a parallel investigation of SARS-CoV.
Cytosolic
phospholipase A2α, cPLA2α, hydrolyses
phospholipid to produce lysophospholipids and free fatty acids. Using
alphacoronavirus HCoV-229E-infected Huh-7 cells, inhibition of
cPLA2α using pyrrolidine-2 at higher concentrations (20
µM) evoked an inhibition of viral titre (Muller et al. , 2018).
Arachidonoyl
trifluoromethylketone, a non-selective inhibitor of multiple
eicosanoid-metabolising enzymes including PLA2 isoforms,
also inhibited viral titres at higher concentrations (Muller et
al. , 2018). Transmission electron microscopy suggested that
cPLA2α inhibition reduced the density of double-membrane
vesicles (Muller et al. , 2018). Analysis of lipid metabolites
indicated that HCoV-229E-infected Huh-7 cells showed increases in levels
of ceramides, lysophospholipids and phosphatidylglycerols, with
decreases in phosphatidic acids (Muller et al. , 2018). 20 µM Py-2
inhibited the elevations in lysophospholipids and phosphatidylglycerols,
but not the ceramides. Intriguingly, some selectivity of the involvement
of PLA2α was suggested as Py-2 also displayed antiviral
activities against other members of the Coronaviridae (andTogaviridae ) families, while members of the Picornaviridaefamily were not affected.
Although speculative, there is the possibility that some of the benefits
of glucocorticoid administration in the clinic might be the
up-regulation of annexins, and the subsequent binding and concealment of
membrane phospholipid from further metabolism (for review, see Lemmon,
2008). While clearly some distance from a validated target, since
phospholipids are an essential component of enveloped viral
proliferation, targeting the host availability of key structural lipids,
particularly sphingolipids, has been proposed to be a useful strategy in
preventing propagation of enveloped human RNA viruses, including
influenza, HIV and hepatitis C (Yager and Konan, 2019). Currently,
however, assays to screen inhibitors of cPLA2α are
relatively limited.
Targetting carbohydrate
turnover
Given that a number of the viral proteins, including the two structural
proteins Spike and Membrane, are glycoproteins, there is clearly a
diversion of sugars from the host. It is unclear as yet, whether
specific sugars are involved and whether specific host
glycosyltransferases are involved and might, therefore, form further
tractable targets for drug discovery.
The other viral structural
proteins
The E envelope protein
The Envelope proteins of SARS-CoV, HCoV229E and MERS are small
(<100 aa) single transmembrane domain proteins (seeFigure 2 ) and constitute ion channels with selectivity for
monovalent cations over monovalent anions (Wilson et al. , 2004;
Zhang et al. , 2014) apparently forming homopentamers in model
membranes (Pervushin et al. , 2009; Surya et al. , 2015).
Infecting or transfecting the coronavirus E message into cells results
in accumulation of protein in the Golgi region (Ruch and Machamer,
2012). Conserved cys residues proximal to the TM domain internally
within the virus are palmitoylated (Lopez et al. , 2008), a
post-translational modification suggested to allow an internal inflexion
point in the protein (Ruch and Machamer, 2012).
Hexamethylene-amiloride
has been described as an inhibitor of the HIV-1 virus Vpu ion channel
(Ewart et al. , 2002) and to reduce virus proliferation in human
macrophages in culture (Ewart et al. , 2004).
Hexamethylene-amiloride, but not the clinically-used amiloride,
inhibited the SARS-CoV envelope protein-associated ion channel activity
when expressed in HEK293 cells (Pervushin et al. , 2009).
Amantadine
has had multiple uses clinically, including in the therapy of
Parkinson’s disease (for review, see Vanle et al. , 2018). It has
been used to treat influenza A infection through targeting the M2 ion
channel (Pinto et al. , 1992; Wang et al. , 1993; Holsingeret al. , 1994), although it is no longer recommended in the UK or
US because of drug resistance (for review, see Li et al. , 2015).
Amantadine at higher concentrations (100 µM) was found to inhibit the
SARS-CoV E protein expressed in model membranes (Torres et al. ,
2007).
SARS-CoV E protein was identified as being pro-apoptotic upon
transfection into Vero E6 monkey epithelial cells, where it localized to
both plasma membrane and punctate cytoplasmic locations (Chan et
al. , 2009). Indeed, the SARS-CoV E protein’s ion channel function has
been linked to calcium entry into endoplasmic reticulum/Golgi membrane
complexes and the subsequent activation of the
NLRP3
inflammasome, leading to interleukin-β
(IL-1β)
production (Nieto-Torres et al. , 2015).
siRNA targeting of the Envelope protein of SARS-CoV reduced virus
release in culture media, without altering N and P gene expression in
FRhK-4 monkey kidney epithelial cells (Lu et al. , 2006). A
similar observation was reported for the ORF4a protein of HCoV229E
(Zhang et al. , 2014). Infecting mice with SARS-CoV in which the E
protein ion channel function was disrupted showed unchanged viral
proliferation but reduced IL-1β and oedema levels in the lungs and
prompted better survival over 10 days post-infection (Nieto-Torreset al. , 2014).
In a preliminary (as yet, unreviewed) report, the E protein of
SARS-CoV-2 has been reported to interact with
BRD2/BRD4
BET family bromodomain kinases when expressed in HEK293 cells (Gordonet al ., 2020).
JQ1
and
RVX208
are BRD2/4 inhibitors with IC50 values with 40-120 and
50-1800 nM ranges, respectively, but there are no reports of clinically
approved agents acting as inhibitors.
The M membrane protein
The membrane protein is usually regarded as the most abundant protein in
the coronavirus envelope (see Figure 2 ) and is of intermediate
size in SARS-CoV-2 (222 aa). It is thought to assist in viral assembly
by collating the other surface structural proteins (Ruch and Machamer,
2012).
The N nucleocapsid
phosphoprotein
The N protein is of moderate size in SARS-CoV-2 (419 aa), highly basic
and binds the viral RNA as a dimeric entity (Fan et al. , 2005)
into nucleocapsids (see Figure 2 ), which afford protection for
the viral genome, while also providing access for replication at
appropriate times (for review, see McBride et al. , 2014). In a
preliminary (not yet peer reviewed) report, the N protein of SARS-CoV-2
was tagged and expressed in HEK293 cells and then protein partners were
identified by affinity purification/mass spectrometry (Gordon et
al. , 2020). The N protein was suggested to interact with casein kinase
2
(CK2),
La-related protein 1 (LARP1,
Link to UniProt) and
stress granule protein Ras GTPase-activating protein-binding protein 1
(G3BP1, Link to UniProt).
CK2 phosphorylates a broad range of cellular targets, mostly in the
nucleus, to regulate development and differentiation (for review, see
Gotz and Montenarh, 2017). Although not in use clinically, two
inhibitors are described to target CK2 with high affinity.
Silmitasertib
is a CK2 inhibitor with an IC50 value of 1 nM (Pierreet al. , 2011), while
TMCB
has a Ki value of 21 nM (Janeczko et al. , 2012).
LARP1 is an RNA-binding protein, which releases RNA when phosphorylated
by mTORC1 (Fonseca et al. , 2015; Hong et al. , 2017). LARP1
seems to preferentially bind 5’-terminal oligopyrimidines with an as-yet
unclear cellular role (Philippe et al. , 2020). Of the three
targets suggested to associate with SARS-CoV-2 N phosphoprotein, G3BP1
seems a relevant focus for therapy against COVID-19. G3BP1 regulates the
innate immune response (Kim et al. , 2019; Liu et al. ,
2019; Wiser et al. , 2019; Yang et al. , 2019) and stress
granules reduce the replication of MERS-CoV (Nakagawa et al. ,
2018), so there is a potential for targetted drug discovery.
Interactions with the host innate immune
system
SARS-CoV produces proteins that interfere with interferon pathways
(nsp1, nsp3, nsp16, ORF3b, ORF6, M and N proteins, Wong et al. ,
2016) and NLRP3 inflammasome activators (E, ORF3a, ORF8b) which are
closely related to orthologues found in SARS-CoV-2. Fung et al (2020)
have recently reviewed the molecular aspects whereby SARS-CoV and, by
inference, SARS-CoV-2, evades immune surveillance, activates the
inflammasome and causes pyroptosis. Other coronaviruses may give an
indication as to how this is happening. HCoV-229E rapidly kills
dendritic cells, while monocytes are much more resistant. The rapid
invasion of, and replication in, dendritic cells kills them within a few
hours of infection (Mesel-Lemoine et al., 2012). Dendritic cells are
sentinel cells in the respiratory tract, and plasmacytoid dendritic
cells are a crucial antiviral defence via interferon production, and by
modifying antibody production. Thus, these viruses can impair control of
viral dissemination and the formation of long-lasting immune memory.
Penetration of SARS-CoV-2 infection deep into the lungs, and eventually
the alveolae, results in the ‘cytokine storm’ which accompanies
pneumonia and lung fibrosis and is probably a major determinant of the
necessity for intubation, and also mortality (Shi et al. , 2020).
It is currently not known what specific factor/s differentiate the
patients who develop this; although mortality among younger health
workers may indicate that initial viral load may play a role.
Immunological agents which can prevent or control the ‘cytokine storm’
could therefore have a major effect on necessity to intubate and
mortality.
Tocilizumab
is a monoclonal antibody targeting
interleukin-6
receptors, as a means to interfere with the effects of chronic
autoimmune disorders, such as rheumatoid arthritis. The Chinese Clinical
Trial Registry has two studies that are designed to evaluate tocilizumab
efficacy in patients with severe COVID-19 pneumonia (Registration
Numbers
ChiCTR2000029765
and
ChiCTR2000030442).
Similarly,
anakinra,
which is a slightly modified recombinant version of an endogenous
antagonist of
interleukin-1
receptors, is being investigated in clinical trials in multiple
locations in patients with COVID-19 infection
(NCT04324021,
NCT04330638
and
NCT02735707).
It has been suggested that in stage III of COVID-19, a critical point
with a high viral load and severe respiratory involvement, lungs of
patients appear with ‘ground-glass’ patches in CT scans, while autopsy
reports indicate that the lungs are filled with a ‘clear liquid jelly’
(Shi et al. , 2020; Xu et al. , 2020), similar to an
observation in drowning victims. On the hypothesis that
inflammation-driven
hyaluronan
production (via hyaluronan synthase 2, HAS2,
Link to UniProt), and
associated water retention may be critical; a recent study proposed
therapy via administration of recombinant hyaluronidase or inhibitors of
HAS2 (Shi et al. , 2020).
The interaction between the virus and the innate immune system is
complex and multifactorial, with temporal intricacies. It is beyond the
scope of this review to identify all the multiple components and so we
discuss here those pathways we consider most tractable.
Viral nucleotides and MDA5/MAVS/Interferon
production
The positive sense RNA of coronaviruses is translated to produce the
replication machinery, which allows complementary negative sense RNA to
be synthesised, which itself is the template for the synthesis of
positive strand RNA. As a consequence, double-stranded RNA is produced,
which acts as a pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) targetting
MDA5
(interferon induced with helicase C domain I, also known as melanoma
differentiation antigen 5, Kato et al. , 2006) from the
RIG-1-like
receptor family of cytoplasmic pattern recognition receptors (for
reviews, see Schlee, 2013; Bryant et al. , 2015). MDA5 differs
from
RIG-1
(DexD/H-box helicase 58, also known as retinoic acid-inducible gene 1)
in recognising longer dsRNA (Kato et al. , 2006; Goubau et
al. , 2014), and it has been proposed this differentiates the sensing of
positive-stranded viruses by MDA5 compared to negative strand virus
sensing by RIG-I (Kato et al. , 2006; Goubau et al. , 2013).
RIG-1-like receptors have an N -terminal caspase activation and
recruitment domain (CARD), which shows ligand-dependent interaction with
CARDs from other proteins, such as mitochondrial antiviral signalling
protein (MAVS, Link to
UniProt). MAVS activates
IKK
family kinases, such as TANK binding kinase
(TBK1)
and
IKK-ε,
leading to the phosphorylation of interferon regulatory factors, such as
IRF3 (Link to UniProt)
and IRF7 (Link to
UniProt). This induces the transcription of Type I interferon genes,
such as
interferon-β
and CCL5 (also known as
RANTES)
(Doyle et al. , 2002; Fitzgerald et al. , 2003; Sharmaet al. , 2003). MAVS present in peroxisomes is also able to
recruit short-acting, interferon-independent defense factors (Dixitet al. , 2010).
A number of other coronavirus proteins have been identified to influence
the IRF3 pathway to restrict interferon production. This includes the
MERS-CoV PLpro proteinase (Yang et al. , 2014), as
well as the ORF6 and Nucleocapsid proteins from SARS-CoV
(Kopecky-Bromberg et al. , 2007). The Orf6 protein of SARS-CoV has
also been described to reduce the activity of a series of
karyopherin-dependent host transcription factors (Sims et al. ,
2013). Karyopherin is an importin, which traffics proteins between the
cytoplasm and the nucleus (for review, see Kosyna and Depping, 2018; Guoet al. , 2019).
Translocases of outer membrane 70 (Tom70,
Link to UniProt)
activates mitochondrial IRF3 (Liu et al. , 2010). The Orf9b
protein of SARS-CoV-2 has been reported to interact with Tom70 when
expressed in HEK293 cells (Gordon et al. , 2020).
The induction and suppression of interferon production have been
extensively studied as they are central to numerous human diseases; the
‘trick’ to treat COVID-19 will be to identify a novel angle for
therapeutic exploitation.
nsp1
Working with SARS-CoV (not SARS-CoV-2), Pfefferle and colleagues used
yeast two-hybrid screens to identify interactions between the viral and
human proteomes (Pfefferle et al. , 2011). They identified an
interesting interaction between viral nsp1 and a group of host
peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans -isomerases (PPIA, PPIG, PPIH and
FKBP1A, FKBP1B), all of which modulate the calcineurin/NFAT pathway
important in immune activation (reviewed by Hogan et al. , 2003).
The nsp1 protein acts on these to activate NFAT signalling and immune
activation.
Cyclosporine
A, an inhibitor of this pathway, has been used for several decades to
control transplant rejection and some autoimmune diseases and, in a
simple in vitro assay, cyclosporine inhibited SARS-CoV
transcription/replication in (non-immune) cells (Pfefferle et
al. , 2011). SARS-CoV-2 has an nsp1 closely related to that of SARS-CoV
(Dong et al. , 2020; Srinivasan et al. , 2020), though its
effect on the NFAT pathway seems not yet to have been reported.
Nevertheless, cyclosporine has been shown to inhibit SARS-CoV-2 in anin vitro Vero cell-based assay in a preliminary report (as yet
not peer-reviewed, Jeon et al. , 2020). It has therefore been
suggested as a drug target (see, for example, Li and De Clercq, 2020).
It may seem paradoxical to suggest an inhibitor of immune activation as
a treatment for viral disease, but for the subgroup of patients that
might suffer cytokine storms (Mehta et al. , 2020), the
double-action might be useful.
ORF3a, ORF6, ORF8, Orf9c and other viral proteins
The ORF3a protein of SARS-CoV appears to bind calcium in a cytoplasmic
domain (Minakshi et al. , 2014) and to elicit a response from the
innate immune system by enhancing the ubiquitination of
apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a CARD (Asc,
Link to UniProt), which
in turn activates the
NLRP3
inflammasome and
caspase
1 (Siu et al. , 2019). The potential for targetting Asc and the
NLRP3 inflammasome for therapeutic benefit in inflammatory conditions
has recently been reviewed (Mangan et al. , 2018), although there
are no inhibitors in the clinic as yet.
In SARS-CoV, the Orf8a and Orf8b genes became separated,
as the disease progressed, by a 29-nucleotide deletion (Chinese SARS
Molecular Epidemiology Consortium, 2004; Oostra et al. , 2007).
The Orf8a gene of SARS-CoV encodes a short (31 aa, 1 TM,
Link to UniProt)
protein, which forms a cation channel of predicted pentameric structure
(Chen et al. , 2011). In SARS-CoV-2 and a bat-derived coronavirus,
in contrast to the SARS-CoV-2 genome, Orf8 which encodes a
continuous 121 aa ORF8 protein (Cagliani et al. , 2020). Given
that sequence analysis of different strains of SARS-CoV-2 suggests that
the Orf8 locus displays only limited evidence of positive selection
(Cagliani et al. , 2020), it seems germane to investigate the
profile of ORF8 in more depth. Sequence comparisons led to prediction of
secondary structure composed of an α-helix and a β-sheet containing six
strands (Chan et al. , 2020), but there appears not to be any
literature as to whether this entity is a functional ion channel.
In a preliminary (as yet, unreviewed) report, the Orf9c protein of
SARS-CoV-2 has been reported to interact with NOD-like receptor X1
(NLRX1),
proteinase-activated receptor 2
(PAR2/F2RL1)
and NEDD4 family-interacting protein 2 (NDFIP2, impdh2
Link
to UniProt), among other proteins of the IκB/NFκB pathway, when
expressed in HEK293 cells (Gordon et al. , 2020). At the moment,
there are no approved drugs targeting PAR2, although AZ3451
(Link
to GtoP) acts as a negative allosteric modulator with
pIC50 values of 5-23 nM (Cheng et al. , 2017).
There is a limited insight into the roles or potential exploitability of
the remaining range of other viral proteins (nsp2; nsp9; nsp11, Orf3b;
ORF6; ORF7a; ORF7b; ORF10).
Animal models of SARS-CoV-2
infection
The spike glycoproteins in SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV are crucial for host
specificity and jumping between species, e.g. from bats to humans (Luet al. , 2015), and from dromedary camels to humans (MERS-CoV) and
also the recent cross-over of a HKU2-related coronavirus to pigs as a
Swine Acute Diarrhoea Syndrome (SADS-CoV) (Zhou et al. , 2018).
SADS-CoV appears to influence the innate immune system by reducing
interferon-β production evoked through IPS-1 and RIG-I pathways (as
described above), but not through IRF3, TBK1 and IKKε (Zhou et
al. , 2020).
ACE2, as the anchoring point for the Spike glycoprotein, is present
throughout the animal kingdom, but small structural differences are
critical in influencing this interaction with the coronavirus (Liet al. , 2020; Luan et al. , 2020). Key sequences of the
Spike protein from SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2 are responsible for binding
to ACE2. Luan et al (2020) found that the key residues in the S protein
from SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2, recognised by ACE2 from dog, cat, pangolin
and Circetidae mammals (simulated through homology modelling)
were broadly similar. Mouse ACE2 is inefficient in prompting entry of
both SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2 (Fung et al. , 2020). Cats and dogs
suffer from their own specific coronavirus infections (e.g. canine
respiratory coronavirus, feline coronavirus) without significant
cross-over to humans. A preliminary (as yet lacking peer review) report
has suggested that cats and ferrets are sensitive to SARS-CoV-2, but
dogs, pigs, chickens and ducks are much less sensitive (Shi et
al. , 2020). Ferrets have been used as models for respiratory tract
infections and retain the SARS-CoV-2 virus in the respiratory tract. Shi
et al (2020) showed that the infection was transmitted between cats by
aerosol, which may have implications for confinement; infected cats
subsequently produced antibodies.
The Syrian hamster has been used as a model for SARS-CoV (Robertset al. , 2005; Roberts et al. , 2006; de Wit et al. ,
2013) and studies with mice and Syrian hamsters are ongoing with
SARS-CoV-2. A preliminary report (as yet not peer-reviewed) suggests
that monkeys can be infected and show signs of sickness similar to
COVID-19, producing antibodies which minimize the signs of subsequent
infection (Bao et al. , 2020).
Thus, while there is intensive research in animal models, a clearly
validated model is still not apparent.
Inter-individual variations in
susceptibility
Given the similarities in the viruses and their symptoms, there is
clearly a value to comparing the profiles of sufferers from the original
SARS, and subsequent MERS, outbreaks with COVID-19 to evaluate the risk
factors associated with each event individually and collectively. A
detailed consideration is beyond the scope of this review, but there are
some obvious questions to ask (not in an order of priority).
- What factor/s determine resistance to infection?
It is apparent that many individuals who test positive for SARS-CoV-2
infection only experience ‘mild’ symptoms, others suffer a level of
debilitation requiring hospitalization with limited supervision, and a
third group require assisted breathing.
- Is blood group a predictor?
There is preliminary evidence (as yet, not peer-reviewed) suggesting
that people with type A blood might be more at risk of COVID-19 than
those with other blood types (Zhao et al. , 2020).
- Are there ‘simple’ genetic markers which predict this variation?
For example, are single nucleotide polymorphisms/haplotypes for key
targets (including ACE2, TMPRSS2, etc, Delanghe et al. , 2020)
associated with higher or lower damage in humans infected with
SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV or SARS-CoV-2?
- Reports suggest that there is a preponderance of male victims of
COVID-19, for example in Spain (Instituto de Salud Carlos III,
Ministry of Science & Innovation, Spain.Retrievedon 2020-03-25, referring to data from 2020-03-24). What might be the
cause of this sexual divergence?
- Is smoking history a predictor of variation?
One potential explanation for the relatively high proportion of male
victims has been suggested to be previous smoking history (Cai, 2020;
Olds and Kabbani, 2020; Vardavas and Nikitara, 2020), clearly a
general risk factor for many diseases. Is there evidence from the SARS
and MERS outbreaks to suggest a commonality of susceptibility?
- What is the impact of contracting the virus on individuals with other
underlying conditions?
For example, what are the mechanism/s underlying why some sufferers of
hypertension and/or diabetes might be at higher risk
(https://www.immunopaedia.org.za/breaking-news/why-are-hypertension-and-diabetes-patients-at-high-risk-of-severe-covid-19/)?
- How will the evolution of the virus alter rates of infection and the
severity of symptoms?
Some level of mutation is to be expected, and indeed has been noted
for the SARS-CoV-2. At the moment, it is too early to identify the
significance of any influence of these mutations on the course of
COVID-19.
Some of these questions are more tractable since the SARS and MERS
outbreaks because of the strides being made in sophisticated molecular
biological techniques (e.g. NextGen Sequencing). An additional
distinction compared to the previous outbreaks is the major increase in
patient numbers associated with COVID-19, allowing greater comparisons
to be made in many more geographical locations.
Inevitably other questions will form as greater detail becomes
available.
Conclusion and
recommendations
This review has concentrated on the prevailing hypothesis that an
essential first step in infection is SARS-CoV-2 binding to ACE2 and for
TMPSS2 to prime the viral Spike protein. We further hypothesise that
both proteins must be expressed on a single target cell for the virus to
gain entry. TMPRSS2 has an extensive cellular expression profile,
whereas ACE2 is more limited and is usually at low levels, unless
increased by risk factors such being sex, age, and smoking history, so
is likely to be rate-limiting. Other potential target proteins such as
cathepsin L or B0AT1 may also prove important.
Currently, although there are no drugs approved for the treatment of
patients with COVID-19, the pandemic has triggered a stampede into
clinical trials with both approved and investigational agents. The
pharmacological rationale for these trials is sometimes obscure, but
there is a logic to focus on viral entry and replication, as well as
limiting the host immune response.
For the immediate term, the highest priority would be to investigate
known antivirals to mitigate effects of COVID-19. For the longer term, a
vaccine (for review, see Amanat and Krammer, 2020) seems to hold the
most promise to reduce COVID-19 damage. There is also a role in the
mid-term, however, for drug discovery conducted in mainstream
pharmacology labs. The goal here would be an international co-ordinated
approach to drug re-purposing; examining the spectrum of licensed drugs
(likely to be less than 2000, varying dependent on jurisdictions). These
would ideally be screened in a co-ordinated, blinded fashion in multiple
labs simultaneously to account for any minor methodological differences.
This requires the re-opening of screening and protein biosynthesis labs
closed at the start of the pandemic, while ensuring that workers are
kept safe.
If one were to write a Target Product Profile for a drug to treat
COVID-19, several parallel profiles can be identified. There are clear
considerations, which may be identified as desirable pharmacodynamic,
screening methodologies, drug metabolism and pharmacokinetic and
formulation profiles.
From a pharmacodynamic perspective, a priority would be to screen the
proteinases identified in this review (ACE2, TMPRSS2, ADAM17, cathepsin
L, cathepsin B, PLpro and 3CLpro). A
second parallel stream would assess inhibitors of the viral RNA
polymerase and endoribonuclease complexes, as well as the ion channel
functions of the viral Envelope (and potentially the Orf8 protein).
Clearly, there are multiple other targets, which might bear fruit, and
so further studies should assess the tractability of
B0AT1/SLC6A19, B0AT3/SLC6A18, IMPDH2
and HAS2. Further, the molecular mechanism of action of
ivermectin
should be assessed, since it has recently been shown to inhibit in
vitro SARS-CoV-2 replication (Caly et al. , 2020). This agent is
used clinically as an anthelmintic, probably through blocking
invertebrate glutamate receptors, although it also inhibits mammalian
glycine receptors and acts as a positive allosteric modulator of other
mammalian ligand-gated ion channels.
From a screening aspect, biophysical and biochemical screens would
probably take a matter of days-to-weeks. Following mass availability of
the recombinant proteins involved, the capacity for inhibition should be
assessed using a library of already approved drugs. Biophysical methods
can be applied, such as surface plasmon resonance or biolayer
interferometry, to monitor the affinity of interaction between host ACE2
and viral spike glycoprotein in the presence of these agents, as well as
the relevant proteins where multimerization is critical, such as the
trimeric Spike glycoprotein. Assessing the remainder of the targets
would likely adopt standard, fluorescent-based pharmacological
methodologies.
A desirable element would also be to minimise adverse effects on the
cardiovascular and respiratory system, given the high incidence of
damage described associated with those systems (Esler and Esler, 2020;
Li et al. , 2020; Lippi et al. , 2020). Candidate drugs
should also not increase activity of the IL-6 (or any other
pro-inflammatory cytokine) pathway to avoid provoking a cytokine storm.
If a similar approach were taken to the ways in which targetted therapy
is applied for certain types of cancer, there would be an increased
benefit in a multimodal strategy. Thus, in cancers where EGF/EGF
receptors are involved, it is possible to target the ligand using
chelating antibodies, to antagonise the receptor using blocking
antibodies, to use specific antibodies to prevent dimerization of the
receptor and to inhibit the catalytic activity of the receptor with
small molecular inhibitors. It should be possible to reproduce this
approach by simultaneously targetting several steps in the viral cycle
(while naturally being cognisant of the potential for phenomena of
drug:drug interactions, for instance in terms of convergent pathways of
drug metabolism). This approach should also show benefit in reducing the
capacity for drug-driven mutation in the enzyme.
From a DMPK perspective, a beneficial profile for any agent would avoid
drug:drug interactions by not converging on key metabolic enzymes and/or
transporters. Ideally, a once-daily treatment regimen would be optimal,
but if more frequent administration were needed, there is likely to be
good patient adherence, given the public response to ‘spatial
distancing’. From a formulation perspective, prophylactic use or for
treatment of mild symptoms, an orally-administered or inhaled
formulation would be appropriate. For more severe cases, where breathing
is significantly impaired, an inhaled aerosolised version may be
difficult to administer effectively; in this circumstance, a soluble
version to be applied intravenously is likely to be useful.
Micro-organisms, such as viruses and bacteria, continue to evolve to
evade our immune systems and previous pandemics contributed to the
decline and fall of civilizations. HIV/AIDS became more widespread in
the last century and was associated with high morbidity and mortality.
As a result of the discovery of novel pharmacological treatments,
including specific antivirals, it is now a chronic condition and a cure
has been effected in at least two individuals. This gives us hope that
the roadmap outlined in this review may provide some relief from
COVID-19 (and indeed for viral threats yet to come).
Legend to Figures
Figure 1 : a graphical representation of the viral lifecycle,
initiated at step 1 cell attachment and finishing with viral release.
Figure 2 : a cartoon of the virus structure, identifying the
four structural proteins and the viral genome.
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