Oxysterol-binding protein (OSBP) is a lipid transport and regulatory protein required for the replication of Enterovirus genus viruses, which includes many significant human pathogens. Short-term exposure (i.e., 1−6 h) to a low dose (i.e., 1 nM) of the natural product compound OSW-1 induces a reduction of cellular OSBP levels by ∼90% in multiple different cell lines with no measurable cytotoxicity, defect in cellular proliferation, or global proteome reduction. Interestingly, the reduction of OSBP levels persists multiple days after the low-dose, transient OSW-1 compound treatment is ended and the intracellular OSW-1 compound levels drop to undetectable levels. The reduction in OSBP levels is inherited in multiple generations of cells that are propagated after the OSW-1 compound treatment is stopped. The enduring multiday, multigenerational reduction of OSBP levels triggered by the OSW-1 compound is not due to proteasome degradation of OSBP or due to a reduction in OSBP mRNA levels. OSW-1 compound treatment induces transient autophagy in cells, but blocking autophagy does not rescue OSBP levels. Although the specific cellular mechanism of long-term OSBP repression is not yet identified, these results clearly show the existence of an OSBP specific cellular regulation process that is triggered upon treatment with an OSBP-binding compound. The stable reduction of OSBP levels upon short-term, transient OSW-1 compound treatment will be a powerful tool to understand OSBP regulation and cellular function. Additionally, the persistent reduction in OSBP levels triggered by the transient OSW-1 compound treatment substantially reduces viral replication in treated cells. Therefore, the long-term, compound-induced reduction of OSBP in cells presents a new route to broad spectrum anti-Enterovirus activity, including as a novel route to antiviral prophylactic treatment through small molecule targeting a human host protein.O xysterol-binding protein (OSBP) and the OSBP-related proteins (ORPs) are a family of lipid and sterol binding proteins conserved in all eukaryotes. 1,2 The 12 OSBP/ORP human proteins share a conserved ∼50 kDa, C-terminal ligand binding domain. 1,2 OSBP and ORP4, the member most closely related to OSBP, share substantial sequence similarity, and both contain N-terminal pleckstrin homology (PH) and FFAT domains. 1,2 Individual OSBP/ORP family members are reported to have many different cellular functions, 1,2 including serving as cellular sensors for lipid membrane composition. 3−6 OSBP is reported to be localized at the membrane contact site between the ER and Golgi, and from this location, OSBP is
Oxysterol-binding protein (OSBP) and OSBP-related protein 4 (ORP4) have emerged as potentially druggable targets in antiviral and precision cancer drug development. Multiple structurally diverse small molecules function through targeting the OSBP/ORP family of proteins, including the antiviral steroidal compounds OSW-1 and T-00127-HEV2. Here, the structure–activity relationships of oxysterols and related compound binding to human OSBP and ORP4 are characterized. Oxysterols with hydroxylation at various side chain positions (i.e., C-20, C-24, C-25, and C-27)but not C-22confer high affinity interactions with OSBP and ORP4. A library of 20(S)-hydroxycholesterol analogues with varying sterol side chains reveal that side chain length modifications are not well tolerated for OSBP and ORP4 interactions. This side chain requirement is contradicted by the high affinity binding of T-00127-HEV2, a steroidal compound lacking the side chain. The binding results, in combination with docking studies using homology models of OSBP and ORP4, suggest multiple modes of steroidal ligand binding to OSBP and ORP4.
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