Casting a wide net to fight coronavirusesSeptember 06, 2005Coronaviruses-the family of viruses that causes the common cold-gained widespread recognition when the deadly severe acute respiratory syndrome, familiarly known as SARS, killed at least 800 people in 2003. Research efforts to design antiviral agents to combat coronaviruses intensified after the SARS epidemic and have focused mostly on just this virus. But because coronavirus sequences and structures mutate so quickly, a challenge is to find wide-spectrum vaccines, since a vaccine targeting one strain would likely be ineffective against another. Online this week in the open-access journal PLoS Biology, Haitao Yang, Dawei Ma, Zihe Rao, and colleagues report that they have produced an antiviral inhibitor that is active against several coronaviruses. The authors combined structural and biochemical analyses to identify a target in the structurally conserved substrate-binding region of the main protease (Mpro). Since humans and other animals have no proteins similar to Mpro, the likelihood of deleterious side effects is low. The substrate-binding site is especially attractive as a target for drug development because evolutionarily conserved regions do not undergo high mutation rates like the rest of the viral genome, allowing antiviral drugs to maintain their effectiveness. Yang et al. created a synthetic version of the Mpro substrate-reasoning that if they could inhibit the substrate's access to the binding site by the mimic (known as suicide inhibitors), they should be able to block the protease's activity and maybe halt viral replication. The authors designed a synthetic inhibitor that bound strongly to the protease and used it as a base to design a panel of inhibitors, which allowed them to identify compounds that rapidly blocked proteases from multiple coronaviruses and kept the coronaviruses from reproducing. The compounds caused no obvious damage in human cells in the experiments. The compounds developed in this study inhibit Mpro from new coronavirus strains that cause conjunctivitis, bronchiolitis, and pneumonia. By identifying promising candidates for drugs capable of targeting the entire Coronavirus genus, Yang et al. have laid the foundation for containing everything from the common cold to the deadly SARS virus. Preclinical and clinical trials will show whether these compounds live up to their promise. Public Library of Science |
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| Related Coronaviruses Current Events and Coronaviruses News Articles Researchers recreate SARS virus, open door for potential defenses against future strains Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Vanderbilt University Medical Center have synthetically reconstructed the bat variant of the SARS coronavirus (CoV) that caused the SARS epidemic of 2003. Synthetic virus supports a bat origin for SARS SARS - severe acute respiratory syndrome - alarmed the world five years ago as the first global pandemic of the 21st century. The coronavirus (SARS-CoV) that sickened more than 8,000 people - and killed nearly 800 of them - may have originated in bats, but the actual animal source is not known. An unexpected link between coronavirus replication and protein secretion in infected cells Coronavirus replication is critically linked to two factors within the early secretory pathway, according to new findings by a team of Dutch researchers that are published June 13th in the open-access journal PLoS Pathogens. Novel virus detection identifies new viruses in study of respiratory infections and asthma attacks A new study has found an unexpected number of viruses and viral subtypes in patients with respiratory tract infections (RTIs). The technique used in the study may help identify new viruses associated with human diseases. New study finds no link between Kawasaki disease and newly discovered coronavirus A newly described virus is not a cause of Kawasaki disease, according to an article by a group of researchers in Denver, Colorado. Researchers probe enzyme that may lead to new SARS drugs Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago and two other institutions have unraveled the structure of an important new drug target from the virus that causes SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome. Flu not the only germ threat this time of year The flu hasn't even hit hard yet this year, but it seems like everyone's getting sick. What's the deal? Details of the life cycle of SARS coronavirus A team of scientists studying Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) has, for the first time, described how the SARS virus manufactures several of the materials required for making copies of itself. "It is essential, when you are looking for ways to stop a disease, that you know exactly how viruses make copies of themselves and spread," explained Dr John Ziebuhr, from the University of Würzburg in Germany. The team has revealed which materials (nucleic acids and proteins) are produced by SARS coronavirus (SARS CoV) inside infected cells. These biological molecules are essential for copies of the virus to be made (a process known as viral replication). "This work could lea Update on SARS at FEMS Congress Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome represents only one of a series of new diseases caused by organisms grouped under the general title 'emerging pathogens'. Others will also be described and discussed at the 1st FEMS Congress of European Microbiologists at Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 29 - July 3, 2003. Several new haemorrhagic fever viruses will be described as well as a newly discovered paramyxovirus isolated from children in the Netherlands that causes respiratory tract disease and pneumonia. The SARS virus is of particular concern now because of the rapid spread of infection and the relatively high mortality following in its wake. The SARS syndrome was first brought to the notice of the W Study Implicates Human Coronavirus As Main Cause Of SARS Early online publication: Tuesday 8 April 2003 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Research from Hong Kong fast-tracked for publication on THE LANCET's website--www.thelancet.com--provides evidence that a new virus belonging to the family Coronaviridae is likely to be the main cause of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). Malik Peiris from the University of Hong Kong and colleagues studied 50 patients with SARS from five separate outbreak clusters. After identifying a new type of coronavirus from two patients, they subsequently found evidence of virus activity in 90% of the patients compared with 0% for a control group of healthy individuals or those with unrelated illnesses. The investigators comme More Coronaviruses Current Events and Coronaviruses News Articles |
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