Abstract
The SARS coronavirus 3C-like proteinase is recognized as a potential drug design target for the treatment of severe acute respiratory syndrome. In the past few years, much work has been done to understand the catalytic mechanism of this target protein and to design its selective inhibitors. The protein exists as a dimer/monomer mixture in solution and the dimer was confirmed to be the active species for the enzyme reaction. Quantitative dissociation constants have been reported for the dimer by using analytic ultracentrifuge, gel filtration and enzyme assays. Though the enzyme is a cysteine protease with a chymotrypsin fold, SARS 3C-like proteinase follows the general base catalytic mechanism similar to chymotrypsin. As the enzyme can cut eleven different sites on the viral polyprotein, the substrate specificity has been studied by synthesized peptides corresponding or similar to the cleavage sites on the polyprotein. Predictive model was built for substrate structure and activity relationships and can be applied in inhibitor design. Due to the lack of potential drugs for the treatment of SARS, the discovery of inhibitors against SARS 3C-like proteinase, which can potentially be optimized as drugs appears to be highly desirable. Various groups have been working on inhibitor discovery by virtual screening, compound library screening, modification of existing compounds or natural products. Highthroughput in vitro assays, auto-cleavage assays and viral replication assays have been developed for inhibition activity tests. Inhibitors with IC50 values as low as 60 nM have been reported.
Keywords: SARS 3C-like proteinase, quaternary structure, enzyme catalytic mechanism, substrate selectivity, inhibitor design
Current Pharmaceutical Design
Title: Quaternary Structure, Substrate Selectivity and Inhibitor Design for SARS 3C-Like Proteinase
Volume: 12 Issue: 35
Author(s): Luhua Lai, Xiaofeng Han, Hao Chen, Ping Wei, Changkang Huang, Shiyong Liu, Keqiang Fan, Lu Zhou, Zhenming Liu, Jianfeng Pei and Ying Liu
Affiliation:
Keywords: SARS 3C-like proteinase, quaternary structure, enzyme catalytic mechanism, substrate selectivity, inhibitor design
Abstract: The SARS coronavirus 3C-like proteinase is recognized as a potential drug design target for the treatment of severe acute respiratory syndrome. In the past few years, much work has been done to understand the catalytic mechanism of this target protein and to design its selective inhibitors. The protein exists as a dimer/monomer mixture in solution and the dimer was confirmed to be the active species for the enzyme reaction. Quantitative dissociation constants have been reported for the dimer by using analytic ultracentrifuge, gel filtration and enzyme assays. Though the enzyme is a cysteine protease with a chymotrypsin fold, SARS 3C-like proteinase follows the general base catalytic mechanism similar to chymotrypsin. As the enzyme can cut eleven different sites on the viral polyprotein, the substrate specificity has been studied by synthesized peptides corresponding or similar to the cleavage sites on the polyprotein. Predictive model was built for substrate structure and activity relationships and can be applied in inhibitor design. Due to the lack of potential drugs for the treatment of SARS, the discovery of inhibitors against SARS 3C-like proteinase, which can potentially be optimized as drugs appears to be highly desirable. Various groups have been working on inhibitor discovery by virtual screening, compound library screening, modification of existing compounds or natural products. Highthroughput in vitro assays, auto-cleavage assays and viral replication assays have been developed for inhibition activity tests. Inhibitors with IC50 values as low as 60 nM have been reported.
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Cite this article as:
Lai Luhua, Han Xiaofeng, Chen Hao, Wei Ping, Huang Changkang, Liu Shiyong, Fan Keqiang, Zhou Lu, Liu Zhenming, Pei Jianfeng and Liu Ying, Quaternary Structure, Substrate Selectivity and Inhibitor Design for SARS 3C-Like Proteinase, Current Pharmaceutical Design 2006; 12 (35) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138161206779010396
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138161206779010396 |
Print ISSN 1381-6128 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1873-4286 |
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