| Literature DB >> 34159337 |
Sirle Saul, Marwah Karim, Pei-Tzu Huang, Luca Ghita, Winston Chiu, Sathish Kumar, Nishank Bhalla, Pieter Leyssen, Courtney A Cohen, Kathleen Huie, Courtney Tindle, Mamdouh Sibai, Benjamin A Pinsky, Soumita Das, Pradipta Ghosh, John M Dye, David E Solow-Cordero, Jing Jin, Dirk Jochmans, Johan Neyts, Aarthi Narayanan, Steven De Jonghe, Shirit Einav.
Abstract
Effective therapies are needed to combat emerging viruses. Seventeen candidates that rescue cells from SARS-CoV-2-induced lethality and target diverse functions emerged in a screen of 4,413 compounds. Among the hits was lapatinib, an approved inhibitor of the ErbB family of receptor tyrosine kinases. Lapatinib and other pan-ErbB inhibitors suppress replication of SARS-CoV-2 and unrelated viruses with a high barrier to resistance. ErbB4, but not lapatinib's cancer targets ErbB1 and ErbB2, is required for SARS-CoV-2 entry and encephalitis alphavirus infection and is a molecular target mediating lapatinib's antiviral effect. In human lung organoids, lapatinib protects from SARS-CoV-2-induced activation of pathways implicated in non-infectious acute lung injury and fibrosis downstream of ErbBs (p38-MAPK, MEK/ERK, and AKT/mTOR), pro-inflammatory cytokine production, and epithelial barrier injury. These findings reveal regulation of viral infection, inflammation, and lung injury via ErbBs and propose approved candidates to counteract these effects with implications for pandemic coronaviruses and unrelated viruses.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34159337 PMCID: PMC8219101 DOI: 10.1101/2021.05.15.444128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: bioRxiv