Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C1175175 (
SARS
)
19,188
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to stimulate the development of drugs against
severe acute respiratory syndrome
(
SARS
), based on the atomic coordinates of the
SARS
coronavirus main proteinase
determined recently [Science 13 (May) (2003) (online)], studies of docking KZ7088 (a derivative of AG7088) and the AVLQSGFR octapeptide to the enzyme were conducted. It has been observed that both the above compounds interact with the active site of the
SARS
enzyme through six hydrogen bonds. Also, a clear definition of the binding pocket for KZ7088 has been presented. These findings may provide a solid basis for subsite analysis and mutagenesis relative to rational design of highly selective inhibitors for therapeutic application. Meanwhile, the idea of how to develop inhibitors of the
SARS
enzyme based on the knowledge of its own peptide substrates (the so-called "distorted key" approach) was also briefly elucidated.
...
PMID:Binding mechanism of coronavirus main proteinase with ligands and its implication to drug design against SARS. 1289 Apr 93
Pharmacophore modeling can provide valuable insight into ligand-receptor interactions. It can also be used in 3D (dimensional) database searching for potentially finding biologically active compounds and providing new research ideas and directions for drug-discovery projects. To stimulate the structure-based drug design against
SARS
(
severe acute respiratory syndrome
), a pharmacophore search was conducted over 3.6 millions of compounds based on the atomic coordinates of the complex obtained by docking KZ7088 (a derivative of AG7088) to
SARS
CoV M(pro) (
coronavirus main proteinase
), as reportedly recently (Chou, K. C.; Wei, D. Q.; Zhong, W. Z. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 2003, 308, 148-151). It has been found that, of the 3.6 millions of compounds screened, 0.07% are with the score satisfying five of the six pharmacophore points. Moreover, each of the hit compounds has been evaluated for druggability according to 13 metrics based on physical, chemical, and structural properties. Of the 0.07% compounds thus retrieved, 17% have a perfect score of 1.0; while 23% with one druggable rule violation, 13% two violations, and 47% more than two violations. If the criterion for druggability is set at a maximum allowance of two rule violations, we obtain that only about 0.03% of the compounds screened are worthy of further tests by experiments. These findings will significantly narrow down the search scope for potential compounds, saving substantial time and money. Finally, the featured templates derived from the current study will also be very useful for guiding the design and synthesis of effective drugs for
SARS
therapy.
...
PMID:Virtual screening for SARS-CoV protease based on KZ7088 pharmacophore points. 1515 80
The cleavage mechanism of
severe acute respiratory syndrome
(
SARS
)
coronavirus main proteinase
(M(pro) or 3CL(pro)) for the octapeptide AVLQSGFR is studied using molecular mechanics (MM) and quantum mechanics (QM). The catalytic dyad His-41 and Cys-145 in the active pocket between domain I and II seem to polarize the pi-electron density of the peptide bond between Gln and Ser in the octapeptide, leading to an increase of positive charge on C(CO) of Gln and negative charge on N(NH) of Ser. The possibility of enhancing the chemical bond between Gln and Ser based on the "distorted key" theory [Anal. Biochem. 233 (1996) 1] is examined. The scissile peptide bond between Gln and Ser is found to be solidified through "hybrid peptide bond" by changing the carbonyl group CO of Gln to CH(2) or CF(2). This leads to a break of the pi-bond system for the peptide bond, making the octapeptide (AVLQSGFR) a "distorted key" and a potential starting system for the design of anti
SARS
drugs.
...
PMID:Polyprotein cleavage mechanism of SARS CoV Mpro and chemical modification of the octapeptide. 1550 16
Severe acute respiratory syndrome
(
SARS
) is a respiratory disease caused by a newly found virus, called
SARS
coronavirus. In this study, the cleavage mechanism of the
SARS
coronavirus main proteinase
(Mpro or 3CLpro) on the octapeptide NH2-AVLQ downward arrowSGFR-COOH was investigated using molecular mechanics and quantum mechanics simulations based on the experimental structure of the proteinase. It has been observed that the catalytic dyad (His-41/Cys-145) site between domains I and II attracts the pi electron density from the peptide bond Gln-Ser, increasing the positive charge on C(CO) of Gln and the negative charge on N(NH) of Ser, so as to weaken the Gln-Ser peptide bond. The catalytic functional group is the imidazole group of His-41 and the S in Cys-145. Ndelta1 on the imidazole ring plays the acid-base catalytic role. Based on the "distorted key theory" [K.C. Chou, Anal. Biochem. 233 (1996) 1-14], the possibility to convert the octapeptide to a competent inhibitor has been studied. It has been found that the chemical bond between Gln and Ser will become much stronger and no longer cleavable by the
SARS
enzyme after either changing the carbonyl group CO of Gln to CH2 or CF2 or changing the NH of Ser to CH2 or CF2. The octapeptide thus modified might become an effective inhibitor or a potential drug candidate against
SARS
.
...
PMID:Molecular modeling and chemical modification for finding peptide inhibitor against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus main proteinase. 1569 6
The
SARS
coronavirus main proteinase
(M(pro)) is a key enzyme in the processing of the viral polyproteins and thus an attractive target for the discovery of drugs directed against
SARS
. The enzyme has been shown by X-ray crystallography to undergo significant pH-dependent conformational changes. Here, we assess the conformational flexibility of the M(pro) by analysis of multiple crystal structures (including two new crystal forms) and by molecular dynamics (MD) calculations. The MD simulations take into account the different protonation states of two histidine residues in the substrate-binding site and explain the pH-activity profile of the enzyme. The low enzymatic activity of the M(pro) monomer and the need for dimerization are also discussed.
...
PMID:pH-dependent conformational flexibility of the SARS-CoV main proteinase (M(pro)) dimer: molecular dynamics simulations and multiple X-ray structure analyses. 1624 52
The
SARS
coronavirus main proteinase
is a prime target for antiviral therapy. In this issue of Chemistry & Biology, Wu et al. describe potent inhibition of the enzyme by benzotriazole esters, which were originally obtained as intermediates in the synthesis of lopinavir derivatives .
...
PMID:Sometimes intermediates. Do the job! 1663 31
The enzymatic activity of the
SARS
coronavirus main proteinase
dimer was characterized by a sensitive, quantitative assay. The new, fluorogenic substrate, (Ala-Arg-Leu-Gln-NH)(2)-Rhodamine, contained a
severe acute respiratory syndrome
coronavirus (
SARS
CoV) main proteinase consensus cleavage sequence and Rhodamine 110, one of the most detectable compounds known, as the reporter group. The gene for the enzyme was cloned in the absence of purification tags, expressed in Escherichia coli and the enzyme purified. Enzyme activity from the
SARS
CoV main proteinase dimer could readily be detected at low pM concentrations. The enzyme exhibited a high K(m), and is unusually sensitive to ionic strength and reducing agents.
...
PMID:Enzymatic activity of the SARS coronavirus main proteinase dimer. 1664 61
According to the "distorted key" theory as elaborated in a review article years ago (Chou, K.C.: Analytical Biochemistry, 1996, 233, 1-14), the knowledge of the cleavable peptides by
SARS
-CoV M(pro) (
severe acute respiratory syndrome
coronavirus main proteinase
) can provide very useful insights on developing drugs against
SARS
. In view of this, the softwares, ZCURVE_CoV 1.0 and ZCURVE_CoV 2.0 (http://tubic.tju.edu.cn/sars/), developed recently for
SARS
-Coronavirus are used to analyze the 36 complete
SARS
-Coronavirus RNA sequences in the gene bank NCBI (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/) from different sources for protein coding genes, and to search for the cleavage sites of
SARS
-CoV M(pro) in polyproteins pp1a and pp1ab. A total of 396 cleavage points are found in the 36
SARS
-Coronavirus and 11 cleavable octapeptides abstracted from the 396 cleavage sites. The statistical distributions of amino acids for the cleavable octapeptides at the subsites R4, R3, R2, R1, R1', R2', R3' and R4' are calculated. The cleavage-specific positions are on R2, R1 and R1', and the positions R3 and R4 are featured by some certain specificity for
SARS
-CoV M(pro). The structural characters of amino acid residues around the cleavage-specific positions are discussed. Two most promising octapeptides, i.e., NH(2)-ATLQ downward arrowAIAS-COOH and NH(2)-ATLQ downward arrowAENV-COOH, are selected to be the candidates for chemical modification, converting into the inhibitors of
SARS
-CoV M(pro). A possible strategy to convert a cleavable octapeptide by
SARS
enzyme into a drug candidate against
SARS
is elucidated.
...
PMID:Application of bioinformatics in search for cleavable peptides of SARS-CoV M(pro) and chemical modification of octapeptides. 1678 16
The
SARS
coronavirus main proteinase
(
SARS
CoV main proteinase) is required for the replication of the
severe acute respiratory syndrome
coronavirus (
SARS
CoV), the virus that causes
SARS
. One function of the enzyme is to process viral polyproteins. The active form of the
SARS
CoV main proteinase is a homodimer. In the literature, estimates of the monomer-dimer equilibrium dissociation constant, KD, have varied more than 65,0000-fold, from <1 nM to more than 200 microM. Because of these discrepancies and because compounds that interfere with activation of the enzyme by dimerization may be potential antiviral agents, we investigated the monomer-dimer equilibrium by three different techniques: small-angle X-ray scattering, chemical cross-linking, and enzyme kinetics. Analysis of small-angle X-ray scattering data from a series of measurements at different
SARS
CoV main proteinase concentrations yielded KD values of 5.8 +/- 0.8 microM (obtained from the entire scattering curve), 6.5 +/- 2.2 microM (obtained from the radii of gyration), and 6.8 +/- 1.5 microM (obtained from the forward scattering). The KD from chemical cross-linking was 12.7 +/- 1.1 microM, and from enzyme kinetics, it was 5.2 +/- 0.4 microM. While each of these three techniques can present different, potential limitations, they all yielded similar KD values.
...
PMID:SARS CoV main proteinase: The monomer-dimer equilibrium dissociation constant. 1714 56
Computational chemistry has always played a key role in anti-viral drug development. The challenges and the quickly rising public interest when a virus is becoming a threat has significantly influenced computational drug discovery. The most obvious example is anti-AIDS research, where HIV protease and reverse transcriptase have triggered enormous efforts in developing and improving computational methods. Methods applied to anti-viral research include (i) ligand-based approaches that rely on known active compounds to extrapolate biological activity, such as machine learning techniques or classical QSAR, (ii) structure-based methods that rely on an experimentally determined 3D structure of the targets, such as molecular docking or molecular dynamics, and (iii) universal approaches that can be applied in a structure- or ligand-based way, such as 3D QSAR or 3D pharmacophore elucidation. In this review we summarize these molecular modeling approaches as they were applied to fight anti-viral diseases and highlight their importance for anti-viral research. We discuss the role of computational chemistry in the development of small molecules as agents against HIV integrase, HIV-1 protease, HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, the influenza virus M2 channel protein, influenza virus neuraminidase, the
SARS
coronavirus main proteinase
and spike protein, thymidine kinases of herpes viruses, hepatitis c virus proteins and other flaviviruses as well as human rhinovirus coat protein and proteases, and other picornaviridae. We highlight how computational approaches have helped in discovering anti-viral activities of natural products and give an overview on polypharmacology approaches that help to optimize drugs against several viruses or help to optimize the metabolic profile of and anti-viral drug.
...
PMID:Development of anti-viral agents using molecular modeling and virtual screening techniques. 2130 43
1
2
Next >>