Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 is the viral pathogen causing the COVID19 global pandemic. Consequently, much research has gone into the development of preclinical assays for the discovery of new or repurposing of FDA-approved therapies. Preventing viral entry into a host cell would be an effective antiviral strategy. One mechanism for SARS-CoV-2 entry occurs when the spike protein on the surface of SARS-CoV-2 binds to an ACE2 receptor followed by cleavage at two cut sites (“priming”) that causes a conformational change allowing for viral and host membrane fusion. TMPRSS2 has an extracellular protease domain capable of cleaving the spike protein to initiate membrane fusion. A validated inhibitor of TMPRSS2 protease activity would be a valuable tool for studying the impact TMPRSS2 has in viral entry and potentially be an effective antiviral therapeutic. To enable inhibitor discovery and profiling of FDA-approved therapeutics, we describe an assay for the biochemical screening of recombinant TMPRSS2 suitable for high throughput application. We demonstrate effectiveness to quantify inhibition down to subnanomolar concentrations by assessing the inhibition of camostat, nafamostat, and gabexate, clinically approved agents in Japan. Also, we profiled a camostat metabolite, FOY-251, and bromhexine hydrochloride, an FDA-approved mucolytic cough suppressant. The rank order potency for the compounds tested are nafamostat (IC50 = 0.27 nM), camostat (IC50 = 6.2 nM), FOY-251 (IC50 = 33.3 nM), and gabexate (IC50 = 130 nM). Bromhexine hydrochloride showed no inhibition of TMPRSS2. Further profiling of camostat, nafamostat, and gabexate against a panel of recombinant proteases provides insight into selectivity and potency.

Highlights

  • SARS-CoV-2 is the viral pathogen causing the COVID19 global pandemic

  • Given that no approved therapeutics for treating any coronaviruses existed at the time SARS-CoV-2 emerged, early attention has focused on drug repurposing opportunities.[1,2]

  • Drug repurposing is an attractive approach to treating SARS-CoV-2, as active drugs approved for use in humans in the United States or by other regulatory agencies, or unapproved drug candidates shown to be safe in human clinical trials, can be nominated for fast-track to the clinic

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Summary

Introduction

SARS-CoV-2 is the viral pathogen causing the COVID19 global pandemic. much research has gone into the development of preclinical assays for the discovery of new or repurposing of FDA-approved therapies. We report the development of a TMPRSS2 fluorogenic biochemical assay and testing of a number of clinical repurposing candidates for COVID19.

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