A screen of the NIH Clinical Collection small molecule library identifies potential anti-coronavirus drugs

J Cao, JC Forrest, X Zhang - Antiviral research, 2015 - Elsevier
J Cao, JC Forrest, X Zhang
Antiviral research, 2015Elsevier
With the recent emergence of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus in humans
and the outbreak of devastating porcine epidemic diarrhea coronavirus in swine, therapeutic
intervention is urgently needed. However, anti-coronavirus drugs currently are not available.
In an effort to assist rapid development of anti-coronavirus drugs, here we screened the NIH
Clinical Collection in cell culture using a luciferase reporter-expressing recombinant murine
coronavirus. Of the 727 compounds screened, 84 were found to have a significant anti …
Abstract
With the recent emergence of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus in humans and the outbreak of devastating porcine epidemic diarrhea coronavirus in swine, therapeutic intervention is urgently needed. However, anti-coronavirus drugs currently are not available. In an effort to assist rapid development of anti-coronavirus drugs, here we screened the NIH Clinical Collection in cell culture using a luciferase reporter-expressing recombinant murine coronavirus. Of the 727 compounds screened, 84 were found to have a significant anti-coronavirus effect. Further experiments revealed that 51 compounds blocked virus entry while 19 others inhibited viral replication. Additional validation studies with the top 3 inhibitors (hexachlorophene, nitazoxanide and homoharringtonine) demonstrated robust anti-coronavirus activities (a reduction of 6 to 8 log10 in virus titer) with an IC50 ranging from 11 nM to 1.2 μM. Furthermore, homoharringtonine and hexachlorophene exhibited broad antiviral activity against diverse species of human and animal coronaviruses. Since the NIH Clinical Collection consists of compounds that have already been through clinical trials, these small molecule inhibitors have a great potential for rapid development as anti-coronavirus drugs.
Elsevier