The recent re-emergence of Zika virus (ZIKV)1, a member of the Flaviviridae family, has become a global emergency. Currently, there are no effective methods of preventing or treating ZIKV infection, which causes severe neuroimmunopathology and is particularly harmful to the developing fetuses of infected pregnant women. However, the pathology induced by ZIKV is unique among flaviviruses, and knowledge of the biology of other family members cannot easily be extrapolated to ZIKV. Thus, structure-function studies of ZIKV proteins are urgently needed to facilitate the development of effective preventative and therapeutic agents. Like other flaviviruses, ZIKV expresses an NS2B-NS3 protease, which consists of the NS2B cofactor and the NS3 protease domain and is essential for cleavage of the ZIKV polyprotein precursor and generation of fully functional viral proteins. Here, we report the enzymatic characterization of ZIKV protease, and we identify structural scaffolds for allosteric small-molecule inhibitors of this protease. Molecular modeling of the protease-inhibitor complexes suggests that these compounds bind to the druggable cavity in the NS2B-NS3 protease interface and affect productive interactions of the protease domain with its cofactor. The most potent compound demonstrated efficient inhibition of ZIKV propagation in vitro in human fetal neural progenitor cells and in vivo in SJL mice. The inhibitory scaffolds could be further developed into valuable research reagents and, ultimately, provide a roadmap for the selection of efficient inhibitors of ZIKV infection.
Proteases are frequent pharmacological targets, and their inhibitors are valuable drugs in multiple pathologies. The catalytic mechanism and the active-site fold, however, are largely conserved among the protease classes, making the development of the selective inhibitors exceedingly challenging. In our departure from the conventional strategies, we reviewed the structure of known camelid inhibitory antibodies, which block enzyme activities via their unusually long, convex-shaped paratopes. We synthesized the human Fab antibody library (over 1.25 × 10 9 individual variants) that carried the extended, 23-to 27-residue, complementarity-determining region (CDR)-H3 segments. As a proof of principle, we used the catalytic domain of matrix metalloproteinase-14 (MMP-14), a promalignant protease and a drug target in cancer, as bait. In our screens, we identified 20 binders, of which 14 performed as potent and selective inhibitors of MMP-14 rather than as broad-specificity antagonists. Specifically, Fab 3A2 bound to MMP-14 in the vicinity of the active pocket with a high 4.8 nM affinity and was similarly efficient (9.7 nM) in inhibiting the protease cleavage activity. We suggest that the convex paratope antibody libraries described here could be readily generalized to facilitate the design of the antibody inhibitors to many additional enzymes. family members control various physiological and pathological processes. Multiple diseases are associated with altered MMP expression and aberrant proteolysis, including cancer (1), wound healing (2), inflammatory diseases (3, 4), neurological pain (5, 6), and hypertension (7). There is consensus among researchers that the individual MMPs are promising drug targets in diversified pathologies and that inhibitor specificity is required for selective and successful MMP therapies (8-10).However, achieving target specificity and selectivity in small-molecule MMP inhibitors is remarkably challenging (11,12). Because the catalytic mechanism and catalytic domain fold are conserved among the MMP/ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase)/ ADAMTS (ADAM with thrombospondin motifs) superfamily members, the available small-molecule inhibitors (most frequently, active-site zinc-chelating hydroxamates) target multiple proteinases, resulting in off-target side effects (8,(12)(13)(14). This aspect is problematic, given that some MMPs (e.g., MMP-14) are always protumorigenic, whereas some other MMPs are antitumorigenic in certain cancer microenvironments (15, 16). As a result, broad-spectrum hydroxamates failed in cancer clinical trials due to their low overall efficacy and side effects (13). Alternatively, antibody-based MMP inhibitors are emerging as both research tools and potential therapeutic agents (10, 17-21) because of (i) high affinity and specificity due to the large antigen-antibody interaction area and multiple complementarity-determining regions (CDRs), (ii) long half-life and well-defined action mechanisms, (iii) low immunogenicity and toxicity, and (iv) multiple MMPs potentially targe...
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