4.5 Article

GNF-2 Inhibits Dengue Virus by Targeting Abl Kinases and the Viral E Protein

Journal

CELL CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 443-452

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2016.03.010

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Harvard Medical School Faculty Development Grant
  2. Armenise-Harvard Junior Faculty Grant
  3. NIH [R01 CA130876, R01 AI076442, R01 AI095499, R56 AI095499, U19 AI109740, U54 AI057159]
  4. Catalyst grant from the Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center [NIH UL1TR001102]
  5. Center for Macromolecular Interactions in the Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology
  6. Harvard ICCB-Longwood Screening Facility

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Dengue virus infects more than 300 million people annually, yet there is no widely protective vaccine or drugs against the virus. Efforts to develop antivirals against classical targets such as the viral protease and polymerase have not yielded drugs that have advanced to the clinic. Here, we show that the allosteric Abl kinase inhibitor GNF-2 interferes with dengue virus replication via activity mediated by cellular Abl kinases but additionally blocks viral entry via an Abl-independent mechanism. To characterize this newly discovered antiviral activity, we developed disubstituted pyrimidines that block dengue virus entry with structure-activity relationships distinct from those driving kinase inhibition. We demonstrate that biotin-and fluorophore-conjugated derivatives of GNF-2 interact with the dengue glycoprotein, E, in the pre-fusion conformation that exists on the virion surface, and that this interaction inhibits viral entry. This study establishes GNF-2 as an antiviral compound with polypharmacological activity andprovides lead'' compounds for further optimization efforts.

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