| Literature DB >> 27898018 |
Gaurav Chopra1, Sashank Kaushik2,3, Peter L Elkin4,5, Ram Samudrala6.
Abstract
Ebola virus disease (EVD) is extremely virulent with an estimated mortality rate of up to 90%. However, the state-of-the-art treatment for EVD is limited to quarantine and supportive care. The 2014 Ebola epidemic in West Africa, the largest in history, is believed to have caused more than 11,000 fatalities. The countries worst affected are also among the poorest in the world. Given the complexities, time, and resources required for a novel drug development, finding efficient drug discovery pathways is going to be crucial in the fight against future outbreaks. We have developed a Computational Analysis of Novel Drug Opportunities (CANDO) platform based on the hypothesis that drugs function by interacting with multiple protein targets to create a molecular interaction signature that can be exploited for rapid therapeutic repurposing and discovery. We used the CANDO platform to identify and rank FDA-approved drug candidates that bind and inhibit all proteins encoded by the genomes of five different Ebola virus strains. Top ranking drug candidates for EVD treatment generated by CANDO were compared to in vitro screening studies against Ebola virus-like particles (VLPs) by Kouznetsova et al. and genetically engineered Ebola virus and cell viability studies by Johansen et al. to identify drug overlaps between the in virtuale and in vitro studies as putative treatments for future EVD outbreaks. Our results indicate that integrating computational docking predictions on a proteomic scale with results from in vitro screening studies may be used to select and prioritize compounds for further in vivo and clinical testing. This approach will significantly reduce the lead time, risk, cost, and resources required to determine efficacious therapies against future EVD outbreaks.Entities:
Keywords: candock; compound–proteome interaction; drug repurposing and discovery; multitarget docking
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27898018 PMCID: PMC5958544 DOI: 10.3390/molecules21121537
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1The Computational Analysis of Novel Drug Opportunities (CANDO) platform as applied to five Ebola proteomes. (A) General version of the platform used to determine drug behavior and similarity by performing a virtual screen to predict interactions between “all” known drugs and “all” protein structures; (B) CANDO platform as applied to Ebola, where the known drugs are docked to structures of five Ebola proteomes to identify the strongest multitarget inhibitors. Credit: Vignettes derived from Protein Data Bank (PDB) structures depicting Ebola virus glycoprotein, matrix protein, nucleoprotein, and nucleocapsid proteins (PDB identifiers 3csy, 4ldd, 4qb0 and 2i8b, 3vne, 3fke respectively).
Selected top ranked drug candidates against Ebola generated by the CANDO platform.
| Compound(s) | Interaction Score | Consensus Score (min) | Protein Target Identifiers |
|---|---|---|---|
| enfuvirtide | 2.0 | 7 | GP2, VP35, 1ebo-F |
| vancomycin, bleomycin | 2.0 | 10 | GP1,2, pre-sGP, SGP, SsGP |
| octreotide, lanreotide, somatostatin | 2.0 | 10 | GP1,2, pre-sGP, SGP, SsGP |
| ubidecarenone (CoQ10) | 1.6 | 7 | GP1,2, GP2, VP24, VP35, VP40, 1ebo-F |
| unoprostone | 1.3 | 10 | GP1,2, VP35, VP24, 1ebo-F |
The name of the compound, a measure of its binding strength or interaction score (range 0-2), its frequency of occurrence or consensus score, and the Uniprot short names or PDB identifiers of the protein targets that it binds to are given. The protein targets are GP2—envelope glycoprotein; VP35—polymerase cofactor VP35; 1ebo-F—membrane-fusion subunit from envelope glycoprotein GP2; pre-sGP—pre-small secreted glycoprotein; sGP—secreted glycoprotein; SsGP—super small secreted glycoprotein; and VP24—membrane-associated protein VP24. A combination of drugs that have broad specificity and/or are derived from disparate functional classes (for example: enfuvirtide and ubidecarenone (CoQ10) AND vancomycin OR octreotide/lanreotide/somatostatin) may be the most promising combinations to pursue for further preclinical and clinical validation.
Overlap between drug candidates identified by the CANDO platform and those identified by Kouznetsova et al. [27].
| Compound(s) | Interaction Score | Consensus Score | Approved Indication | Mode of Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.897 | 3 | helminthic infestation | inhibits parasite metabolism | |
| 1.897 | 1 | depression, anxiety | selective serotonin receptor inhibitor | |
| 1.897 | 1 | anovulation, oligoovulation | selective estrogen receptor modulator | |
| Alverine | 1.897 | 1 | gastrointestinal muscle spasms | parasympathetic nervous system modulator |
| Aprindine | 1.897 | 1 | cardiac arrhythmia | sodium channel inhibitor |
| 1.897 | 1 | helminthic infestation | tubulin destabilizer | |
| Salmeterol | 1.890 | 2 | asthma | beta 2 adrenergic receptor agonist |
| Topotecan | 1.823 | 1 | ovarian and lung cancers | DNA topoisomerase I inhibitor |
| 1.377 | 10 | cardiac arrhythmia | sodium-potassium channel blocker | |
| Propafenone | 1.298 | 10 | cardiac arrhythmia | sodium channel blocker |
| 1.067 | 1 | cardiac arrhythmia | sodium-potassium channel blocker | |
| Proglumetacin | 1.058 | 1 | non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug | cyclooxygenase-1 inhibitor |
| Posaconazole | 1.023 | 3 | fungal infection (aspergillus and candida) | membrane bound enzyme inhibitor |
| 0.843 | 2 | osteoporosis and breast cancer prevention | selective estrogen receptor modulator | |
| Clarithromycin | 0.741 | 2 | bacterial infections | protein synthesis inhibitor |
| 0.741 | 1 | allergies | H1 histamine receptor inhibitor | |
| Colchicine | 0.741 | 1 | gout, pericarditis | microtubule inhibitor |
| 0.741 | 1 | estrogen receptor positive breast cancer | Selective estrogen receptor modulator | |
| Thiothixene | 0.741 | 1 | psychotic disorders, e.g., schizophrenia | dopamine antagonist |
| Daunorubicin | 0.714 | 1 | hematologic dyscrasia (acute lymphocytic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia) | DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor |
| Dronedarone | 0.722 | 1 | cardiac arrhythmia | potassium channel blocker |
| Vincristine | 0.707 | 1 | hematologic dyscrasia (acute lymphocytic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia) | microtubule inhibitor |
* Drugs also identified by Johansen et al. [28].
Overlap between drug candidates generated by the CANDO platform and those identified by Johansen et al. [28] as FDA approved actives.
| Compound(s) | Interaction Score | Consensus Score | Approved Indication | Mode of Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.897 | 3 | helminthic infestation | inhibits parasite metabolism | |
| Quinestrol | 1.897 | 3 | hormone replacement therapy | synthetic steroidal estrogen receptor agonist |
| 1.897 | 1 | depression, anxiety | selective serotonin receptor inhibitor | |
| 1.897 | 1 | anovulation, oligoovulation | selective estrogen receptor modulator | |
| Propoxyphene | 1.897 | 1 | mild to moderate pain | opiate receptor binder |
| Atovaquone | 1.897 | 1 | pneumocystis Pneumonia | dihydroorotate dehydrogenase inhibitor |
| Azelastine | 1.897 | 1 | allergic rhinitis | H1 histamine receptor inhibitor |
| Danazol | 1.897 | 1 | endometriosis | androgen receptor competitive inhibitor |
| 1.897 | 1 | helminthic infestation | tubulin destabilizer | |
| Hydroxyprogesterone | 1.823 | 2 | preterm labor | steroidal progesterone receptor agonist |
| 1.377 | 10 | cardiac arrhythmia | sodium-potassium channel blocker | |
| 1.067 | 1 | cardiac arrhythmia | sodium-potassium channel blocker | |
| Ritonavir | 1.057 | 2 | HIV infection | protease inhibitor |
| 0.843 | 2 | osteoporosis and breast cancer prevention | selective estrogen receptor modulator | |
| Ciclesonide | 0.843 | 1 | asthma, allergic rhinitis | glucocorticoid receptor agonist |
| 0.741 | 1 | allergies | H1 histamine receptor inhibitor | |
| Podofilox | 0.741 | 1 | skin warts caused by Human papilloma virus | tubulin polymerization inhibitor |
| 0.741 | 1 | estrogen receptor + breast cancer | selective estrogen receptor modulator | |
| Desloratadine | 0.741 | 1 | allergies | H1 histamine receptor inhibitor |
| Methdilazine | 0.741 | 1 | allergy symptoms, antiemetic | H1 histamine receptor antagonist |
| Chlorcyclizine | 0.741 | 1 | allergy symptoms, antiemetic | H1 histamine receptor antagonist |
| Azacitidine | 0.712 | 1 | myelodysplastic syndrome | DNA methyl transferase inhibitor |
| Terconazole | 0.711 | 1 | fungal infection | ERG11/CYP51 inhibitor |
| Bromocriptine | 0.707 | 1 | pituitary tumors, Parkinson’s disease | dopamine receptor agonist |
* Drugs also identified by Kouznetsova et al. [27].
Figure 2Binding modes of unoprostone and ubidecarenone to the membrane-fusion subunit from the Ebola virus envelope glycoprotein, GP2 (PDB identifier 1ebo, chain F). (A) Binding site residues (stick representation) predicted by COFACTOR by comparing binding motifs to a library of the PDB ligand-bound structures; (B) Search space for CANDOCK to dock fragments of small molecule compounds that are reconstructed while incorporating flexibility of both small molecule and the protein; (C) Docked conformation of uniprostone bound to the region of the fusion peptides forming disulfide-bonded loop that is homologous to an immunosuppressive sequence in retroviral glycoproteins. Uniprostone is shown as spheres (top) along with its interaction to the protein surface up to 10 Å (bottom); (D) Docked conformation of ubidecarenone bound to coiled coil region near the C-terminal end that acts as the membrane anchor. Ubidecarenone is shown as spheres (top) along with its interaction to the protein surface of the coiled coil region up to 10 Å (bottom). Together, these two molecules likely disrupt the conserved disulfide-bonded loop and the linker region that function as a hinge, transferring information from the GP1 receptor binding to trigger a conformational change in GP2, thereby disrupting the membrane fusion event.