COVID-19 drug lead treatments identified
An international team of researchers has tested more than 10,000 compounds to identify six drug candidates that may help treat COVID-19.
The research, involving University of Queensland scientist Professor Luke Guddat, tested the efficacy of approved drugs, drug candidates in clinical trials and other compounds.
“Currently there are no targeted therapeutics or effective treatment options for COVID-19,” Professor Guddat said.
“In order to rapidly discover lead compounds for clinical use, we initiated a program of high-throughput drug screening, both in laboratories and also using the latest computer software to predict how different drugs bind to the virus.
Professor Guddat said the project targeted the main COVID-19 virus enzyme, known as the main protease or Mpro, which plays a pivotal role in mediating viral replication.
“This makes it an attractive drug target for this virus, and as people don’t naturally have this enzyme, compounds that target it are likely to have low toxicity.
“We add the drugs directly to the enzyme or to cell cultures growing the virus and assess how much of each compound is required to stop the enzyme from working or to kill the virus.
“If the amount is small, then we have a promising compound for further studies.”
After assaying thousands of drugs, researchers found of the six that appear to be effective in inhibiting the enzyme, one is of particular interest.
“We’re particularly looking at several leads that have been subjected to clinical trials including for the prevention and treatment of various disorders such as cardiovascular diseases, arthritis, stroke, atherosclerosis and cancer,” Professor Guddat said.
“Compounds that are already along the pipeline to drug discovery are preferred, as they can be further tested as antivirals at an accelerated rate compared to new drug leads that would have to go through this process from scratch.”
After the enzyme’s structure was made public, the team received more than 300 requests for more information, even before the paper was published.
“To provide an analogy, we’ve provided scientists with a fishing pole, the line and the exact bait, and have in only one month caught some fish,” Professor Guddat said.
“Now it’s up to us and the other fisherman – our fellow scientists globally – to take full advantage of this breakthrough.”
“With continued and up-scaled efforts we are optimistic that new candidates can enter the COVID-19 drug discovery pipeline in the near future.”
The international collaboration was led by researchers at ShanghaiTech University.
The Latest Updates from Bing News & Google News
Go deeper with Bing News on:
COVID-19 treatment
- AI-based analysis of CT images for rapid triage of COVID-19 patientson April 22, 2021 at 5:59 am
The COVID-19 pandemic overwhelms the medical resources in the stressed intensive care unit (ICU) capacity and the shortage of mechanical ventilation (MV). We performed CT-based analysis combined with ...
- Can-Fite Expands its Phase II COVID-19 Study to Europeon April 22, 2021 at 4:21 am
Can-Fite BioPharma Ltd. (NYSE American: CANF) (TASE:CFBI), a biotechnology company advancing a pipeline of proprietary small molecule drugs that address inflammatory, cancer and liver diseases, today ...
- Unitaid chief: We need to ‘double down’ on R&D for COVID-19 treatmenton April 22, 2021 at 4:21 am
Effective treatments could help prevent more deaths amid the slow rollout of COVID-19 vaccines in countries. But apart from dexamethasone, other repurposed drugs have not shown significant benefits ...
- NIH trial to evaluate antibody therapeutic for Covid-19 treatmenton April 22, 2021 at 4:15 am
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has commenced subject enrolment in a Phase II/III ACTIV-2 trial of a new fully human polyclonal antibody therapeutic called SAB-185 for treating Covid-19 in non ...
- Specialized treatment for COVID-19 long haulers begins at NH hospitalon April 22, 2021 at 2:40 am
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center has launched a specialized program to treat COVID-19 long haulers, people who are still experiencing symptoms long after they contracted the virus. Doctors at ...
Go deeper with Google Headlines on:
COVID-19 treatment
Go deeper with Bing News on:
COVID-19
- 6 Indian hospitals have run out of oxygen as the country faces a record-breaking COVID-19 surgeon April 22, 2021 at 6:16 am
COVID-19 cases are surging in India, and a lack of oxygen means hospitals can't help treat people who are severely ill with the virus.
- Covid-19 Rates in Los Angeles Have Gone From Worst to Among the Beston April 22, 2021 at 6:00 am
Theories on why infections, deaths and hospitalizations have plummeted include high immunity from past spikes and a less infectious variant.
- AI-based analysis of CT images for rapid triage of COVID-19 patientson April 22, 2021 at 5:59 am
The COVID-19 pandemic overwhelms the medical resources in the stressed intensive care unit (ICU) capacity and the shortage of mechanical ventilation (MV). We performed CT-based analysis combined with ...
- America is running out of people willing to get a COVID-19 shot, and some vaccination sites are even shutting down because of a lack of demandon April 22, 2021 at 5:54 am
The US may not reach herd immunity because many people don't want a COVID-19 vaccine, the Kaiser Family Foundation said.
- India smashes global one-day record for new cases; infections in vaccinated people uncommon, study says: Live COVID-19 updateson April 22, 2021 at 5:41 am
India sets a global record for new infections as the world's second-most populous country endures a deadly coronavirus surge. Latest COVID-19 news.