Article
Author: Frank, Andreas O. ; Moquin, Stephanie ; Jarrousse, Nadine ; Sarko, Christopher ; Marx, Vanessa M. ; Knapp, Mark ; Zhang, Lei ; Hesse, Matthew ; Carias, Heidi ; Fang, Eric ; Moser, Heinz ; Dovala, Dustin ; Diagana, Thierry T. ; Fuller, Daniel ; Donahue, Kristine ; Cortopassi, Wilian Augusto ; Tandeske, Laura ; Busby, Scott ; Ornelas, Elizabeth ; King, Frederick ; Tang, Jenny ; Wang, Yu ; Eastman, Richard T. ; Nguyen, Zachary ; Garland, Keira ; Barkan, David T. ; Chan, Ryan ; Jia, Weiping
The COVID-19 pandemic highlights the ongoing risk of zoonotic transmission of coronaviruses to global health. To prepare for future pandemics, it is essential to develop effective antivirals targeting a broad range of coronaviruses. Targeting the essential and clinically validated coronavirus main protease (Mpro), we constructed a structurally diverse Mpro panel by clustering all known coronavirus sequences by Mpro active site sequence similarity. Through screening, we identified a potent covalent inhibitor that engaged the catalytic cysteine of SARS-CoV-2 Mpro and used structure-based medicinal chemistry to develop compounds in the pyrazolopyrimidine sulfone series that exhibit submicromolar activity against multiple Mpro homologues. Additionally, we solved the first X-ray cocrystal structure of Mpro from the human-infecting OC43 coronavirus, providing insights into potency differences among compound-target pairs. Overall, the chemical compounds described in this study serve as starting points for the development of antivirals with broad-spectrum activity, enhancing our preparedness for emerging human-infecting coronaviruses.