[HTML][HTML] PIKfyve-specific inhibitors restrict replication of multiple coronaviruses in vitro but not in a murine model of COVID-19

J Logue, AR Chakraborty, R Johnson, G Goyal… - Communications …, 2022 - nature.com
J Logue, AR Chakraborty, R Johnson, G Goyal, M Rodas, LJ Taylor, L Baracco, ME McGrath…
Communications Biology, 2022nature.com
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has claimed more than 6 million lives and continues to
test the world economy and healthcare systems. To combat this pandemic, the biological
research community has shifted efforts to the development of medical countermeasures,
including vaccines and therapeutics. However, to date, the only small molecules approved
for the treatment of COVID-19 in the United States are the nucleoside analogue Remdesivir
and the protease inhibitor Paxlovid, though multiple compounds have received Emergency …
Abstract
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has claimed more than 6 million lives and continues to test the world economy and healthcare systems. To combat this pandemic, the biological research community has shifted efforts to the development of medical countermeasures, including vaccines and therapeutics. However, to date, the only small molecules approved for the treatment of COVID-19 in the United States are the nucleoside analogue Remdesivir and the protease inhibitor Paxlovid, though multiple compounds have received Emergency Use Authorization and many more are currently being tested in human efficacy trials. One such compound, Apilimod, is being considered as a COVID-19 therapeutic in a Phase II efficacy trial. However, at the time of writing, there are no published efficacy data in human trials or animal COVID-19 models. Here we show that, while Apilimod and other PIKfyve inhibitors have potent antiviral activity in various cell lines against multiple human coronaviruses, these compounds worsen disease in a COVID-19 murine model when given prophylactically or therapeutically.
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