New dengue virus inhibitors targeting NS3-NS5 interaction identified by in silico screening
Giulio Nannetti, Beatrice Mercorelli, Alessandro Bazzacco, Nicolò Santi, Marta Celegato, Salvatore Ferla, Mattia Sturlese, Niklaas J. Buurma, Andrea Brancale, Arianna Loregian

TL;DR
Researchers identified new compounds that inhibit a key interaction in the dengue virus, potentially leading to new antiviral treatments.
Contribution
The study introduces novel chemical scaffolds with pan-dengue antiviral activity targeting the NS3-NS5 interaction.
Findings
Hit compounds reduced NS3-NS5 binding in vitro and inhibited DENV-2 replication at low micromolar concentrations.
Hit 3 showed antiviral activity against all four DENV serotypes and bound directly to NS5.
Structure-activity relationship studies identified structural analogues retaining anti-DENV activity.
Abstract
Dengue virus (DENV) poses a major public health concern as it is responsible for approximately 100 million human infections annually. Since no antiviral drugs are currently available to treat DENV infection, the development of effective therapeutic strategies is urgently needed. For anti-DENV drug discovery, the interaction between DENV NS3 and NS5 proteins represents an attractive target, as it is essential for viral replication and is highly conserved across all DENV serotypes. In this study, we report two distinct virtual screenings of commercially available drug-like compounds, which were performed to identify inhibitors of the NS3-NS5 interaction. Both screening approaches led to the identification of hit compounds that were able to reduce NS3-NS5 binding in vitro in a dose-dependent manner, as measured by an ELISA-based assay. Moreover, the hits inhibited the replication of DENV-2…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMosquito-borne diseases and control · Malaria Research and Control · Viral Infections and Outbreaks Research
