Abstract
Despite
COVID-19 turned into a pandemic, no approved drug for the treatment or globally
available vaccine is out yet. In such a global emergency, drug repurposing
approach that bypasses a costly and long-time demanding drug discovery process
is an effective way in search of finding drugs for the COVID-19 treatment.
Recent studies showed that SARS-CoV-2 uses neuropilin-1 (NRP1) for host entry.
Here I took advantage of structural information of the NRP1 in complex with
C-terminal of spike (S) protein of SARS-CoV-2 to identify drugs that may
inhibit NRP1 and S protein interaction. U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
approved drugs were screened using docking simulations. Among top drugs,
well-tolerated drugs were selected for further analysis. Molecular dynamics
(MD) simulations of drugs-NRP1 complexes were run for 100 ns to assess the
persistency of binding. MM/GBSA calculations from MD simulations showed that
eltrombopag, glimepiride, sitagliptin, dutasteride, and ergotamine stably and
strongly bind to NRP1. In silico Alanine scanning analysis revealed that Tyr297,
Trp301, and Tyr353 amino acids of NRP1 are critical for
drug binding. Validating the effect of drugs analyzed in this paper by
experimental studies and clinical trials will expedite the drug discovery
process for COVID-19.