TY - JOUR
T1 - Discovery of pyrimidoindol and benzylpyrrolyl inhibitors targeting SARS-CoV-2 main protease (Mpro) through pharmacophore modelling, covalent docking, and biological evaluation
AU - Mahgoub, Radwa E.
AU - Mohamed, Feda E.
AU - Ali, Bassam R.
AU - Ferreira, Juliana
AU - Rabeh, Wael M.
AU - Atatreh, Noor
AU - Ghattas, Mohammad A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - The main protease (Mpro) enzyme has an imperative function in disease progression and the life cycle of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Although the orally active drug nirmatrelvir (co-administered with ritonavir as paxlovid) has been approved for emergency use as the frontline antiviral agent, there are a number of limitations that necessitate the discovery of new drug scaffolds, such as poor pharmacokinetics and susceptibility to proteolytic degradation due to its peptidomimetic nature. This study utilized a novel virtual screening workflow that combines pharmacophore modelling, multiple-receptor covalent docking, and biological evaluation in order to find new Mpro inhibitors. After filtering and analysing ∼66,000 ligands from three different electrophilic libraries, 29 compounds were shortlisted for experimental testing, and two of them exhibited ≥20% inhibition at 100 μM. Our top candidate, GF04, is a benzylpyrrolyl compound that exhibited the highest inhibition activity of 38.3%, with a relatively small size (<350 Da) and leadlike character. Interestingly, our approach also identified another hit, DR07, a pyrimidoindol with a non-peptide character, and a molecular weight of 438.9 Da, reporting an inhibition of 26.3%. The established approach detailed in this study, in conjunction with the discovered inhibitors, has the capacity to yield novel perspectives for devising covalent inhibitors targeting the COVID-19 Mpro enzyme and other comparable targets.
AB - The main protease (Mpro) enzyme has an imperative function in disease progression and the life cycle of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Although the orally active drug nirmatrelvir (co-administered with ritonavir as paxlovid) has been approved for emergency use as the frontline antiviral agent, there are a number of limitations that necessitate the discovery of new drug scaffolds, such as poor pharmacokinetics and susceptibility to proteolytic degradation due to its peptidomimetic nature. This study utilized a novel virtual screening workflow that combines pharmacophore modelling, multiple-receptor covalent docking, and biological evaluation in order to find new Mpro inhibitors. After filtering and analysing ∼66,000 ligands from three different electrophilic libraries, 29 compounds were shortlisted for experimental testing, and two of them exhibited ≥20% inhibition at 100 μM. Our top candidate, GF04, is a benzylpyrrolyl compound that exhibited the highest inhibition activity of 38.3%, with a relatively small size (<350 Da) and leadlike character. Interestingly, our approach also identified another hit, DR07, a pyrimidoindol with a non-peptide character, and a molecular weight of 438.9 Da, reporting an inhibition of 26.3%. The established approach detailed in this study, in conjunction with the discovered inhibitors, has the capacity to yield novel perspectives for devising covalent inhibitors targeting the COVID-19 Mpro enzyme and other comparable targets.
KW - Benzylpyrrolyl
KW - Covalent docking
KW - Covalent inhibitors
KW - Pharmacophore
KW - Pyrimidoindol
KW - SARS-CoV-2 M
KW - Structure-based virtual screening
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jmgm.2023.108672
DO - 10.1016/j.jmgm.2023.108672
M3 - Article
C2 - 37992552
AN - SCOPUS:85177614713
SN - 1093-3263
VL - 127
JO - Journal of Molecular Graphics and Modelling
JF - Journal of Molecular Graphics and Modelling
M1 - 108672
ER -