Mucin-inspired, high molecular weight virus binding inhibitors show biphasic binding behavior to influenza A viruses
Matthias Wallert, Chuanxiong Nie, Parambath Anilkumar, Srinivas, Abbina, Sumati Bhatia, Jayachandran N. Kizhakkedathu, Rainer Haag, Stephan, Block

TL;DR
This study develops mucin-inspired, high molecular weight virus binding inhibitors that exhibit biphasic binding behavior to influenza A viruses, demonstrating high potency at picomolar concentrations and highlighting the importance of size and multivalency.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel class of multivalent, mucin-inspired inhibitors with sizes up to 2600 kDa, showing enhanced inhibition efficiency and revealing biphasic binding dynamics to influenza A virus.
Findings
Inhibitors show potent inhibition at pM concentrations.
Inhibition efficiency decreases with lower molecular weight.
Biphasic binding behavior linked to viral envelope proteins.
Abstract
Multivalent virus binding inhibitors are a promising new class of antivirals, preventing virus infection of cells by inhibiting the first step in the viral infection cycle - binding of viruses to the cell surface. The design of multivalent virus binding inhibitors is complex as many properties, such as inhibitor size and functionalization with virus attachment factors, have a strong impact on the inhibition efficiency. In this study, we synthesized virus binding inhibitors, the design of which has been inspired by mucins, which are naturally occurring glycosylated proteins with molecular weights in the MDa range and which show high affinity in the interaction with various viruses. Hyperbranched polyglycerols (hPG), serving as polymeric scaffolds, were functionalized with sialic acids and sulfate groups at degrees of functionalization as suggested from the structure of mucins. The…
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