4.5 Article

Suite of TMPRSS2 Assays for Screening Drug Repurposing Candidates as Potential Treatments of COVID-19

Journal

ACS INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 1191-1203

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.2c00172

Keywords

COVID-19; TMPRSS2; antiviral; drug repurposing; high-throughput screening

Funding

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Division of Preclinical Innovation

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This study developed a suite of biochemical assays for the discovery and development of new inhibitors of TMPRSS2. Through drug repurposing, a total of 6030 compounds were screened biochemically, and the potential antiviral compounds were evaluated in cell-based experiments.
ABSTRACT: SARS-CoV-2 is the causative viral pathogen driving the COVID-19 pandemic that prompted an immediate global response to the development of vaccines and antiviral therapeutics. For antiviral therapeutics, drug repurposing allows for rapid movement of the existing clinical candidates and therapies into human clinical trials to be tested as COVID-19 therapies. One effective antiviral treatment strategy used early in symptom onset is to prevent viral entry. SARS-CoV-2 enters ACE2-expressing cells when the receptor-binding domain of the spike protein on the surface of SARS-CoV-2 binds to ACE2 followed by cleavage at two cut sites by TMPRSS2. Therefore, a molecule capable of inhibiting the protease activity of TMPRSS2 could be a valuable antiviral assay for the biochemical screening of 6030 compounds in NCATS annotated libraries. Then, we developed an orthogonal biochemical assay that uses mass spectrometry detection of product formation to ensure that hits from the primary screen are not assay artifacts from the fluorescent detection of product formation. Finally, we assessed the hits from the biochemical screening in a cell-based SARS-CoV-2 pseudotyped particle entry assay. Of the six molecules advanced for further studies, two are approved drugs in Japan (camostat and nafamostat), two have entered clinical trials (PCI-27483 and otamixaban), while the other two molecules are peptidomimetic inhibitors of TMPRSS2 taken from the literature that have not advanced into clinical trials (compounds 92 and 114). This work demonstrates a suite of assays for the discovery and development of new inhibitors of TMPRSS2.

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