| Literature DB >> 32226821 |
Cynthia Liu1, Qiongqiong Zhou1, Yingzhu Li1, Linda V Garner1, Steve P Watkins1, Linda J Carter1, Jeffrey Smoot1, Anne C Gregg1, Angela D Daniels1, Susan Jervey1, Dana Albaiu1.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32226821 PMCID: PMC7094090 DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.0c00272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Cent Sci ISSN: 2374-7943 Impact factor: 14.553
Figure 1Global distribution of confirmed COVID-19 cases. (Map was reproduced from WHO Coronavirus Disease (COVID-2019) Situation Reports.[3] Used with permission from ref (3). Copyright 2020 World Health Organization.)
Figure 2Global trend of confirmed COVID-19 cases and associated deaths from January 23 through March 9, 2020. (Data were obtained from WHO Coronavirus Disease (COVID-2019) Situation Reports[3]).
Figure 3Cartoon illustration of the coronavirus structure and viral receptor ACE2 on the host cell surface. (Image was reproduced with permission from ref (9), Nature Reviews Microbiology 7(3), 226–236. Copyright 2009 Springer Nature.)
Figure 4Number of journal articles related to COVID-19 published each week.
Notable Journal Articles on COVID-19 and/or SARS-CoV-2 Published as of February 23, 2020a
| no. | journal | paper title | publication date | organization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The New England Journal of Medicine | A novel coronavirus from patients with pneumonia in China, 2019 | January 24, 2020 | NHC Key Laboratory
of Biosafety, China, and National Institute for Viral Disease Control,
Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, China |
| 2 | Lancet | Clinical features of patients infected with 2019 novel coronavirus in Wuhan, China | January 24, 2020 | Department of Pulmonary and Critical
Care Medicine, China-Japan Friendship Hospital, Beijing, China; NHC
Key Laboratory of Systems Biology of Pathogens and Christophe Merieux
Laboratory, Institute of Pathogen Biology, Chinese Academy of Medical
Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China |
| 3 | The New England Journal of Medicine | Early transmission dynamics in Wuhan, China, of novel coronavirus-infected pneumonia | January 29, 2020 | Chinese Center
for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, China; School of Public
Health, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong; Hubei Center for Disease
Control and Prevention, Wuhan, Hubei, China |
| 5 | Journal of Virology | Receptor recognition by novel coronavirus from Wuhan: An analysis based on decade-long structural studies of SARS | January 29, 2020 | Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA |
| 6 | Lancet | Epidemiological and clinical characteristics of 99 cases of 2019 novel coronavirus pneumonia in Wuhan, China: a descriptive study | January 30, 2020 | Tuberculosis and Respiratory Department, Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital, Wuhan, China |
| 7 | The New England Journal of Medicine | First case of 2019 novel coronavirus in the United States | January 31, 2020 | The Washington State Department of Health Public
Health Laboratories, WA, USA |
| 8 | Lancet | Genomic characterisation and epidemiology of 2019 novel coronavirus: implications for virus origins and receptor binding | January 30, 2020 | NHC Key Laboratory of Biosafety, National
Institute for Viral Disease Control and Prevention, Chinese Center
for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, China, Central Theater,
People’s Liberation Army General Hospital, Wuhan, China, Center
for Biosafety Mega-Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China |
| 9 | Lancet | Nowcasting and forecasting the potential domestic and international spread of the 2019-nCoV outbreak originating in Wuhan, China: a modelling study | January 31, 2020 | School of Public Health, Li Ka Shing Faculty
of Medicine, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China |
| 10 | Nature | A new coronavirus associated with human respiratory disease in China | February 3, 2020 | Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center & School of Public
Health, Fudan University, Shanghai, China |
| 11 | Nature | A pneumonia outbreak associated with a new coronavirus of probable bat origin | February 3, 2020 | Key Laboratory of Special Pathogens, Wuhan Institute of Virology,
Center for Biosafety Mega-Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, China |
| 12 | Lancet | Baricitinib as potential treatment for 2019-nCoV acute respiratory disease | February 4, 2020 | BenevolentAI, London, UK and Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, UK |
| 13 | Cell Research | Remdesivir and chloroquine effectively inhibit the recently emerged novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in vitro | February 4, 2020 | State Key Laboratory of Virology,
Wuhan Institute of Virology, Center for Biosafety Mega-Science, Chinese
Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, China, and National Engineering Research
Center for the Emergency Drug, Beijing Institute of Pharmacology and
Toxicology, Beijing, China |
| 14 | Emerging Microbes & Infections | RNA based mNGS approach identifies a novel human coronavirus from two individual pneumonia cases in 2019 Wuhan outbreak | February 5, 2020 | State Key Laboratory of Virology, Modern Virology Research
Center, College of Life Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan, China |
| 15 | The Journal of the American Medical Association | Clinical characteristics of 138 hospitalized patients with 2019 novel coronavirus-infected pneumonia in Wuhan, China | February 7, 2020 | Department of Critical Care Medicine, Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan, Hubei, China |
| 16 | Cell Host & Microbe | Genome composition and divergence of the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) originating in China | February 7, 2020 | National Institute for Viral Disease Control
and Prevention, China CDC, Beijing, China; Department of Microbiology,
Immunology and Molecular Genetics, University of California, Los Angeles,
USA; Center for Systems Medicine, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences
& Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China |
| 17 | Cellular & Molecular Immunology | Fusion mechanism of 2019-nCoV and fusion inhibitors targeting HR1 domain in spike protein | February 11, 2020 | Key Laboratory of Medical Molecular Virology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Fudan-Jinbo Joint Research Center, Fudan University, Shanghai, China |
Note: The publication date is the date for electronic publication.
Only corresponding organization(s) is/are listed for papers published by multiple organizations.
Figure 5Distribution of patents related to SARS (A) and MERS (B) based on application purpose.
Key Proteins and Their Roles during the Viral Infection Process
| target candidate | full name | role during viral infection | drug candidate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3CLpro | coronavirus main protease 3CLpro | a protease for the proteolysis of viral polyprotein into functional units | lopinavir[ |
| PLpro | papain-like protease PLpro | a protease for the proteolysis of viral polyprotein into functional units | lopinavir[ |
| RdRp | RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase for replicating viral genome | remdesivir,[ |
| S protein | viral spike glycoprotein | a viral surface protein for binding to host cell receptor ACE2 | Arbidol[ |
| TMPRSS2 | transmembrane protease, serine 2 | a host cell-produced protease that primes S protein to facilitate its binding to ACE2 | camostat mesylate[ |
| ACE2 | angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 | a viral receptor protein on the host cells which binds to viral S protein | Arbidol[ |
| AT2 | angiotensin AT2 receptor | an important effector involved in the regulation of blood pressure and volume of the cardiovascular system | L-163491[ |
An inhibitor of viral entry to host cells. Its direct action on S protein and ACE2 is yet to be confirmed.
Key Protein Targets and Related Patents in the CAS Content Collection and Potential Drug Candidates in CAS REGISTRY of Chemical Substances
| target | no. of patents | no. of potential drug candidates |
|---|---|---|
| 3CLpro | 49 | 2178 |
| PLpro | 4 | 189 |
| RdRp | 26 | 570 |
| S protein | 46 | 333 |
| ACE2 | 5 | 97 |
| AT2 | 2 | 38 |
Existing Drugs with Therapeutic Potentials for COVID-19 (Drug Repurposing)
| drug candidate | CAS RN | target | possible mechanism of action on COVID-19 | disease indication |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| baricitinib[ | 1187594-09-7 | JAK kinase | a JAK inhibitor that may interfere with the inflammatory processes | approved drug for rheumatoid arthritis |
| lopinavir[ | 192725-17-0 | viral proteases: 3CLpro or PLpro | protease inhibitors that may inhibit the viral proteases: 3CLpro or PLpro | lopinavir and ritonavir are approved drug combination for HIV infection |
| ritonavir[ | 155213-67-5 | |||
| darunavir[ | 206361-99-1 | approved drug for HIV infection | ||
| favipiravir (favilavir)[ | 259793-96-9 | RdRp | a purine nucleoside that acts as an alternate substrate leading to inaccurate viral RNA synthesis | viral infections |
| remdesivir[ | 1809249-37-3 | a nucleotide analogue that may block viral nucleotide synthesis to stop viral replication | Ebola virus infection | |
| ribavirin[ | 36791-04-5 | RSV infection, hepatitis C, some viral hemorrhagic fevers | ||
| galidesivir[ | 249503-25-1 | hepatitis C, Ebola virus, Marburg virus | ||
| BCX-4430 (salt form of galidesivir)[ | 222631-44-9 | hepatitis C, Ebola virus, Marburg virus | ||
| Arbidol[ | 131707-23-8 | S protein/ACE2 | an inhibitor that may disrupt the binding of viral envelope protein to host cells and prevent viral entry to the target cell | influenza antiviral drug |
| chloroquine[ | 54-05-7 | endosome/ACE2 | a drug that can elevate endosomal pH and interfere with ACE2 glycosylation | malarial parasite infection |
| nitazoxanide[ | 55981-09-4 | N/A | a drug that may inhibit viral protein expression | various helminthic, protozoal, and viral infection-caused diarrhea |
Drugs under clinical trials for treating COVID-19 (repurposing).
Drugs under clinical trials for other virus-induced diseases.
Ritonavir is a pharmacokinetic profile enhancer that may potentiate the effects of other protease inhibitors due to its ability to attenuate the degradation of those drugs by the liver enzyme CYP3A4 and thus is used in combination with antivirial Lopinavir.[37]
An inhibitor of viral entry to host cells. Its direct action on S protein and ACE2 is yet to be confirmed.
Selected Patents Associated with Potential Drugs (Repurposing) for COVID-19 or Small Molecules for Treatment of SARS or MERS
| patent no. | priority date | title | organization |
|---|---|---|---|
| WO2009114512 | 20080311 | Preparation of azetidine and cyclobutane derivatives as JAK inhibitors | Incyte Corporation, USA |
| WO2014028756 | 20140220 | Deuterated baricitinib | Concert Pharmaceuticals, Inc., USA |
| JP5971830 | 20150428 | Preparation of polycyclic pyridone derivatives as cap-dependent endonuclease (CEN) inhibitors and prodrugs thereof | Shionogi and Co., Ltd., Japan |
| US20160122374 | 20141029 | Preparation of nucleosides and methods for treating Filoviridae virus infections | Gilead Sciences, Inc., USA |
| US20170071964 | 20160916 | Preparation of amino acid-containing nucleotides and methods for treating arenaviridae and coronaviridae virus infections | Gilead Sciences, Inc., USA |
| WO2007075145 | 20070704 | Preparation of benzopyranone derivatives as anti-coronaviral agents | Singapore Polytechnic, Singapore; Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica Chinese Academy of Sciences, China |
| WO2005021518 | 20050310 | Preparation of 3,4-dihydro-2 | Ono Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., Japan |
| WO2007120160 | 20071025 | Preparation of N-heterocyclic acetamides useful for viral inhibition | Novartis AG, USA |
| WO2009119167 | 20091001 | Aniline derivative having anti-RNA viral activity | KinoPharma, Inc., Japan |
| WO2013049382 | 20130404 | Broad-spectrum antivirals against 3c or 3c-like proteases of picornavirus-like supercluster: picornaviruses, caliciviruses and coronaviruses | Kansas State University Research Foundation; The Ohio State University; Wichita State University - all in USA |
| WO2018042343 | 20180308 | Preparation of peptides that inhibit 3C and 3CL proteases and methods of use thereof | GlaxoSmithKline, UK |
| WO2007067515 | 20070614 | Five-membered iminocyclitol derivatives as selective and potent glycosidase inhibitors: new structures for antivirals and osteoarthritis therapeutics | Academia Sinica, Taiwan |
Small Molecule Compounds in Research and Development with Therapeutic Potential for COVID-19
| CAS RN | small molecule compound | target | possible mechanism of action on COVID-19 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4431-00-9 | aurine tricarboxylic acid | RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) | an inhibitor
that may bind to viral RdRp, as tested against SARS-CoV in cell culture[ |
| 502960-90-9 | 4-methyl- | viral proteases: 3CLpro and PLpro | an inhibitor that may disrupt the function of
3CLpro and PLpro, which was tested against SARS-CoV[ |
| 1851279-09-8 | 4-(1,1-dimethylethyl)- | ||
| 1851280-00-6 | 4-(2-methoxyethyl)- | ||
| 223537-30-2 | rupintrivir | a cysteine protease inhibitor that may disrupt
the function of 3CLpro and PLpro[ | |
| 2409054-43-7 | (α | viral proteases: 3CLpro or PLpro | an inhibitor that may disrupt the function of 3CLpro or PLpro,
as tested against SARS-CoV or MERS-CoV[ |
| 452088-38-9 | 5-[(4-methyl-1-piperidinyl)sulfonyl]-1 | ||
| 2409054-44-8 | 3-hydroperoxy-4-[2-hydroxy-3-[3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-1-oxo-2-propen-1-yl]-6-methoxyphenyl]-2-butanone | ||
| 41137-87-5 | hirsutenone | ||
| 992-59-6 | benzopurpurin B | NSP15 (poly(U)-specific endoribonuclease) | chemical inhibitors
that may suppress viral infectivity by inhibiting endoribonuclease
NSP15, as tested against SARS-CoV in cultured cells[ |
| 351891-58-2 | C-467929 | ||
| 331675-78-6 | C-473872 | ||
| 813419-93-1 | NSC-306711 | ||
| 501444-06-0 | N-65828 | ||
| 477775-14-7 | C-21 | AT2 | an angiotensin AT2 receptor agonist
that may alleviate the virus-induced lung injury[ |
| 127060-75-7 | CGP-42112A | ||
| 170969-73-0 | L-163491 | a dual-property molecule that functions
as angiotensin AT1 partial antagonist and AT2 agonist which may alleviate
the virus-induced lung injury[ |
Examples of Similar Molecules with Possible Therapeutic Effects Identified by Structural Similarity, Lipinski’s Rule of 5, and Pharmacology/Therapeutic Role Assigned by CAS Scientists during Document Indexing
| query substance name (CAS RN) | no. of substances with >60% similarity | example of selected similar substance | Registry Number of selected similar substance |
|---|---|---|---|
| ribavirin (36791-04-5) | 1520 | viramidine | 119567-79-2 |
| galidesivir (249503-25-1) | 502 | (2 | 1610426-50-0 |
| (2 | 872534-76-4 | ||
| (2 | 1610426-51-1 | ||
| chloroquine (54-05-7) | 21176 | hydroxychloroquine | 118-42-3 |
| (±)-chloroquine diphosphate | 50-63-5 | ||
| chloroquine hydrochloride | 3545-67-3 | ||
| chloroquine sulfate | 132-73-0 | ||
| favipiravir (259793-96-9) | 309 | 6-bromo-3,4-dihydro-3-oxo-2-pyrazine-5-d-carboxamide | 1476773-04-2 |
| 6-fluoro-3,4-dihydro-3-oxo-2-pyrazine-5-d-carboxamide | 1492021-26-7 | ||
| 2-butanone, 3-hydroperoxy-4-[2-hydroxy-3-[3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-1-oxo-2-propen-1-yl]-6-methoxyphenyl] (2409054-44-8) | 63195 | xanthoangelol D | 132998-83-5 |
Figure 6Distribution of biologics patents related to SARS and MERS.
Target Analysis of Patents on Developing Therapeutic Antibodies for SARS
| patent number | antigen of SARS antibody | patent title | organization | priority date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP2112164 | lipid attachment signals or GPI | Antiviral peptides linked to a lipid attachment signals or GPI against enveloped virus such as HIV, avian flu, SARS or Ebola virus | Institute Pasteur of Shanghai | 20080229 |
| WO2009128963 | spike protein | Cross-neutralizing human monoclonal antibodies to SARS-CoV and methods of use thereof | Institute for Research In Biomedicine | 20080117 |
| WO2009128963 | spike protein | Cross-neutralizing human monoclonal antibodies to spike protein of SARS coronavirus and methods of use thereof | Humab, LLC | 20080117 |
| WO2008035894 | viral infection | Preparation of antiviral antibody 3D8 fragments and their use in treatment of viral infection | Sung Kyun Kwan University; Ajou University; Invitroplant Co., Ltd. | 20060919 |
| WO2008060331 | spike protein | Antibodies to SARS coronavirus | Amgen Inc. | 20060519 |
| WO2007044695 | spike protein | Neutralizing monoclonal anti-spike protein antibodies for diagnosis and treatment of SARS-coronavirus-associated disease and screening of vaccine or anti-SARS agent | Dana-Farber Cancer Institute | 20051007 |
| CN1911963 | RBD of S protein | Method for preparing neutralizing monoclonal antibody against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus and its application | Chinese Academy of Sciences | 20050810 |
| CN1903878 | spike protein | Fab fragment of human antibody IgG against SARS coronavirus | Fudan University | 20050726 |
| WO2006095180 | S2 protein | Human monoclonal antibodies against SARS-associated coronavirus and treatment of patients with SARS | Ultra Biotech Ltd.; University of California | 20050310 |
| WO2006086561 | spike protein | Neutralizing monoclonal antibodies against severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus | New York Blood Center, Inc. | 20050208 |
| CN1664100 | spike protein | Preparation of heavy chain and light chain variable regions of anti-SARS coronavirus antigen antibodies and their diagnostic and therapeutic uses thereof | Chen Zhinan | 20050204 |
| CN1660912 | IL-8 | Sequences of monoclonal antibodies against human interleukin 8 and therapeutic use | Ye Qingwei | 20041208 |
| WO2006051091 | spike protein | Compositions against SARS-coronavirus and uses thereof | Crucell Holland BV | 20041111 |
| WO2006051091 | spike protein | Compositions against SARS-coronavirus comprising at least two immunoglobulins reacting with non-competing epitopes, and therapeutic and diagnostic uses thereof | Crucell Holland BV | 20041111 |
| CN1673231 | spike protein | Monoclonal antibody of SARS coronavirus N protein and its use in treatment of SARS virus infections | Chinese Academy of Sciences | 20040715 |
| US20060240551 | spike protein | Neutralizing monoclonal antibodies against severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus | New York Blood Center, Inc. | 20040602 |
| WO2005054469 | spike protein | Anti-SARS-coronavirus monoclonal antibodies, and diagnostic, therapeutic and vaccine preparation uses | Health Canada | 20031205 |
| WO2005060520 | spike protein | Antibodies specific to SARS-CoV spike protein for diagnosis and therapy of SARS and for screening of epitopic vaccines or anti-SARS therapeutics | Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Inc. | 20031125 |
| US20050106563 | spike protein | Epitope profiles of SARS coronavirus for use in antigen detection, antibody production, and defense against infection | Genesis Biotech Inc. | 20030908 |
| US20050069869 | spike protein | SARS coronavirus codon-optimized sequences for spike (S) protein expression, anti-S human monoclonal antibodies, and therapeutic and diagnostic uses thereof | University of Massachusetts | 20030804 |
| WO2005012360 | S and N proteins | Antibody binding molecules specific for SARS coronavirus | Crucell Holland BV | 20030722 |
| CN1566155 | S, N, and M proteins | Antibody library-derived human monoclonal anti-SARS virus antibodies for treating severe acute respiratory syndrome | Igcon Therapeutics Co., Ltd.; Genetastix Corporation | 20030710 |
| WO2005007671 | spike protein | Compositions and methods for treating SARS using peptides derived from SARS virus E2 N-terminal-alpha helix or C-terminal-alpha helix and related monoclonal antibody | Epitomics, Inc. | 20030429 |
Representative siRNA Data from CN1569233
| sequence | CAS RN | gene target | % inhibition of SARS virus |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5′-caucauccggugaugcuac-3′ | 872062-80-1 | RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | ∼50 |
| 5′-uaguguauacggcaugcuc-3′ | 872062-81-2 | helicase | ∼70 |
| 5′-gugcgugcagacgguucgu-3′ | 872062-82-3 | nucleoprotein N | ∼95 |
| 5′-cguagucgcgguaauucaa-3′ | 872067-98-6 | proteolytic enzyme | ∼90 |
Figure 7Distribution of vaccine-related patent associated to SARS and MERS.
Representative siRNA Data from Chinese Patent CN1648249
| siRNA | sense strand (CAS RN) | antisense strand (CAS RN) |
|---|---|---|
| No. 8* | 5′-cgucgcagcguguaggcacu | 5′-cagugccuacacgcugcgacg-3′ |
| (RN 874840-18-3) | (RN 874840-32-1) | |
| No. 51* | 5′-aacgguuuacgucuacucgc | 5′-cgcgaguagacguaaaccguu-3′ |
| (RN 874840-19-4) | (RN 874840-47-8) | |
| No. 56* | 5′-aacguacugccacaaaacag | 5′-acuguuuuguggcaguacguu-3′ |
| (RN 874840-20-7) | (RN 874840-46-7) |
Representative siRNA Data from US20050004063
| siRNA | sense strand | CAS RN | target region or gene |
|---|---|---|---|
| SARSi-1 | 5′-gugaacucacucgugagcuctt-3′ | 821121-35-1 | 512–531 bp of replicase A1 region |
| SARSi-2 | 5′-guacccucuugauugcauctt-3′ | 821121-36-2 | 586–604 bp of replicase A1 region |
| SARSi-3 | 5′-gagucgaagagaggugucutt-3′ | 821121-37-3 | 916–934 bp of replicase A1 region |
| SARSi-4 | 5′-gcacuugucuaccuugaugtt-3′ | 821121-38-4 | 1194–1213 of replicase A1 region |
| SARSi-5 | 5′-ccuccagaugaggaagaagtt-3′ | 821121-39-5 | 3028–3046 bp of replicase A region |
| SARSi-6 | 5′-gguguuuccauuccaugugtt-3′ | 821121-40-8 | 5024–5042 bp of replicase A region |
| SARSi-7 | 5′-cacugauuccguucgagauctt-3′ | 821121-41-9 | S gene |
| SARSi-8 | 5′-cguuucggaagaaacagguactt-3′ | 821121-42-0 | E gene |
| SARSi-9 | 5′-caagccucuucucgcuccuctt-3′ | 821121-43-1 | N gene |
| SARSi-10 | 5′-guggcuuagcuacuucguugtt-3′ | 821121-44-2 | M gene |
| SARSi-11 | 5′-ugcuugcugcugucuacagtt-3′ | 821121-45-3 | M gene |