Taking advantage of the uniquely constricted active site of SARS-CoV-2 Nsp14
methyltransferase, we have designed bisubstrate inhibitors interacting with the SAM and
RNA substrate binding pockets. Our efforts have led to nanomolar inhibitors including
compounds
3
and
10
. As a prototypic inhibitor, compound
3
also has an excellent selectivity profile over a panel of human
methyltransferases. Remarkably,
C
-nucleoside
10
exhibits
high antiviral activity and low cytotoxicity, leading to a therapeutic index
(CC
50
/EC
50
) greater than 139. Furthermore, a brief metabolic
profiling of these two compounds suggests that they are less likely to suffer from major
metabolic liabilities. Moreover, computational docking studies point to
protein–ligand interactions that can be exploited to enhance inhibitory activity.
In short, discovery of inhibitor
10
clearly demonstrates that potent and
selective anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity can be achieved by targeting the Nsp14
methyltransferase. Therefore, the current work strongly supports the continued pursuit
of Nsp14 methyltransferase inhibitors as COVID-19 therapeutics.