| Literature DB >> 33140046 |
Drake M Mellott1, Chien-Te Tseng2, Aleksandra Drelich2, Pavla Fajtová3,4, Bala C Chenna1, Demetrios H Kostomiris1, Jason Hsu2, Jiyun Zhu1, Zane W Taylor5,6, Vivian Tat2, Ardala Katzfuss1, Linfeng Li1, Miriam A Giardini3, Danielle Skinner3, Ken Hirata3, Sungjun Beck3, Aaron F Carlin7, Alex E Clark3, Laura Beretta3, Daniel Maneval8, Felix Frueh8, Brett L Hurst9, Hong Wang9, Klaudia I Kocurek5, Frank M Raushel5, Anthony J O'Donoghue3, Jair Lage de Siqueira-Neto3, Thomas D Meek1, James H McKerrow3.
Abstract
K777 is a di-peptide analog that contains an electrophilic vinyl-sulfone moiety and is a potent, covalent inactivator of cathepsins. Vero E6, HeLa/ACE2, Caco-2, A549/ACE2, and Calu-3, cells were exposed to SARS-CoV-2, and then treated with K777. K777 reduced viral infectivity with EC50 values of inhibition of viral infection of: 74 nM for Vero E6, <80 nM for A549/ACE2, and 4 nM for HeLa/ACE2 cells. In contrast, Calu-3 and Caco-2 cells had EC50 values in the low micromolar range. No toxicity of K777 was observed for any of the host cells at 10-100 μM inhibitor. K777 did not inhibit activity of the papain-like cysteine protease and 3CL cysteine protease, encoded by SARS-CoV-2 at concentrations of ≤ 100 μM. These results suggested that K777 exerts its potent anti-viral activity by inactivation of mammalian cysteine proteases which are essential to viral infectivity. Using a propargyl derivative of K777 as an activity-based probe, K777 selectively targeted cathepsin B and cathepsin L in Vero E6 cells. However only cathepsin L cleaved the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and K777 blocked this proteolysis. The site of spike protein cleavage by cathepsin L was in the S1 domain of SARS-CoV-2 , differing from the cleavage site observed in the SARS CoV-1 spike protein. These data support the hypothesis that the antiviral activity of K777 is mediated through inhibition of the activity of host cathepsin L and subsequent loss of viral spike protein processing.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33140046 PMCID: PMC7605553 DOI: 10.1101/2020.10.23.347534
Source DB: PubMed Journal: bioRxiv