Abstract
The non-structural
protein 7 (nsp7) of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) coronaviruses was
selected as a new target to potentially interfere with viral replication. The nsp7s are uniquely conserved small
coronavirus proteins having a critical, yet intriguing participation on the
replication of the long viral RNA genome after complexing with nsp8 and nsp12.
Drugs with potential to interfere with nsp7s have not been described yet.
Despite the difficulties of having no previously defined binding pocket, high-throughput blind
screening of more than one hundred thousand natural compounds < 400 Dalton
of molecular weight docked against the
nsp7.1ysy conformer identified hundreds of leads displaying predicted high
binding-affinities by AutoDockVina. The leads
were then docked to 14 nsp7 available conformers by two different binding scoring algorithms ( AutoDockVina-PyRx
and HYDE-seeSAR), to identify consensus
top-leads. Further predictive analysis of their physiological/toxicity ADMET
criteria (chemical properties, adsorption, metabolism, toxicity) narrowed
top-leads to a few drug-like ligands, most of them showing steroid-like
structures closely related to some of those being actually used in clinical
work. A final optimization by search for structural similarities to the
drug-like top-lead, yielded a collection
of novel steroid-like ligands with ~100-fold higher-affinity whose antiviral
activity may be experimentally validated since they are available. Additionally, these nsp7-interacting ligands
and/or their further optimized derivatives, may offer new tools to investigate
the intriguing role of nsp7 on replication of coronaviruses