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1.
- The COVID Moonshot Initiative; Hagit Achdout; Anthony Aimon; Elad Bar-David; Haim Barr; Amir Ben-Shmuel; James Bennett; Vitaliy A. Bilenko; Vitaliy A. Bilenko; Melissa L. Boby; Bruce Borden; Gregory R. Bowman; Juliane Brun; Sarma BVNBS; Mark Calmiano; Anna Carbery; Daniel Carney; Emma Cattermole; Edcon Chang; Eugene Chernyshenko; John D. Chodera; Austin Clyde; Joseph E. Coffland; Galit Cohen; Jason Cole; Alessandro Contini; Lisa Cox; Milan Cvitkovic; Alex Dias; Kim Donckers; David L. Dotson; Alice Douangamath; Shirly Duberstein; Tim Dudgeon; Louise Dunnett; Peter K. Eastman; Noam Erez; Charles J. Eyermann; Mike Fairhead; Gwen Fate; Daren Fearon; Oleg Fedorov; Matteo Ferla; Rafaela S. Fernandes; Lori Ferrins; Richard Foster; Holly Foster; Ronen Gabizon; Adolfo Garcia-Sastre; Victor O. Gawriljuk; Paul Gehrtz; Carina Gileadi; Charline Giroud; William G. Glass; Robert Glen; Itai Glinert; Andre S. Godoy; Marian Gorichko; Tyler Gorrie-Stone; Ed J. Griffen; Storm Hassell Hart; Jag Heer; Michael Henry; Michelle Hill; Sam Horrell; Victor D. Huliak; Matthew F.D. Hurley; Tomer Israely; Andrew Jajack; Jitske Jansen; Eric Jnoff; Dirk Jochmans; Tobias John; Steven De Jonghe; Anastassia L. Kantsadi; Peter W. Kenny; J. L. Kiappes; Serhii O. Kinakh; Lizbe Koekemoer; Boris Kovar; Tobias Krojer; Alpha Lee; Bruce A. Lefker; Haim Levy; Ivan G. Logvinenko; Nir London; Petra Lukacik; Hannah Bruce Macdonald; Beth MacLean; Tika R. Malla; Tatiana Matviiuk; Willam McCorkindale; Briana L. McGovern; Sharon Melamed; Kostiantyn P. Melnykov; Oleg Michurin; Halina Mikolajek; Bruce F. Milne; Aaron Morris; Garrett M. Morris; Melody Jane Morwitzer; Demetri Moustakas; Aline M. Nakamura; Jose Brandao Neto; Johan Neyts; Luong Nguyen; Gabriela D. Noske; Vladas Oleinikovas; Glaucius Oliva; Gijs J. Overheul; David Owen; Ruby Pai; Jin Pan; Nir Paran; Benjamin Perry; Maneesh Pingle; Jakir Pinjari; Boaz Politi; Ailsa Powell; Vladimir Psenak; Reut Puni; Victor L. Rangel; Rambabu N. Reddi; St Patrick Reid; Efrat Resnick; Emily Grace Ripka; Matthew C. Robinson; Ralph P. Robinson; Jaime Rodriguez-Guerra; Romel Rosales; Dominic Rufa; Kadi Saar; Kumar Singh Saikatendu; Chris Schofield; Mikhail Shafeev; Aarif Shaikh; Jiye Shi; Khriesto Shurrush; Sukrit Singh; Assa Sittner; Rachael Skyner; Adam Smalley; Bart Smeets; Mihaela D. Smilova; Leonardo J. Solmesky; John Spencer; Claire Strain-Damerell; Vishwanath Swamy; Hadas Tamir; Rachael Tennant; Warren Thompson; Andrew Thompson; Susana Tomasio; Igor S. Tsurupa; Anthony Tumber; Ioannis Vakonakis; Ronald P. van Rij; Laura Vangeel; Finny S. Varghese; Mariana Vaschetto; Einat B. Vitner; Vincent Voelz; Andrea Volkamer; Frank von Delft; Annette von Delft; Martin Walsh; Walter Ward; Charlie Weatherall; Shay Weiss; Kris M. White; Conor Francis Wild; Matthew Wittmann; Nathan Wright; Yfat Yahalom-Ronen; Daniel Zaidmann; Hadeer Zidane; Nicole Zitzmann.
Preprint en Inglés | bioRxiv | ID: ppbiorxiv-339317

RESUMEN

The COVID-19 pandemic is a stark reminder that a barren global antiviral pipeline has grave humanitarian consequences. Future pandemics could be prevented by accessible, easily deployable broad-spectrum oral antivirals and open knowledge bases that derisk and accelerate novel antiviral discovery and development. Here, we report the results of the COVID Moonshot, a fully open-science structure-enabled drug discovery campaign targeting the SARS-CoV-2 main protease. We discovered a novel chemical scaffold that is differentiated from current clinical candidates in terms of toxicity, resistance, and pharmacokinetics liabilities, and developed it into noncovalent orally-bioavailable nanomolar inhibitors with clinical potential. Our approach leveraged crowdsourcing, high-throughput structural biology, machine learning, and exascale molecular simulations. In the process, we generated a detailed map of the structural plasticity of the main protease, extensive structure-activity relationships for multiple chemotypes, and a wealth of biochemical activity data. In a first for a structure-based drug discovery campaign, all compound designs (>18,000 designs), crystallographic data (>500 ligand-bound X-ray structures), assay data (>10,000 measurements), and synthesized molecules (>2,400 compounds) for this campaign were shared rapidly and openly, creating a rich open and IP-free knowledgebase for future anti-coronavirus drug discovery.

2.
Preprint en Inglés | bioRxiv | ID: ppbiorxiv-175430

RESUMEN

SARS-CoV-2 has intricate mechanisms for initiating infection, immune evasion/suppression, and replication, which depend on the structure and dynamics of its constituent proteins. Many protein structures have been solved, but far less is known about their relevant conformational changes. To address this challenge, over a million citizen scientists banded together through the Folding@home distributed computing project to create the first exascale computer and simulate an unprecedented 0.1 seconds of the viral proteome. Our simulations capture dramatic opening of the apo Spike complex, far beyond that seen experimentally, which explains and successfully predicts the existence of cryptic epitopes. Different Spike homologues modulate the probabilities of open versus closed structures, balancing receptor binding and immune evasion. We also observe dramatic conformational changes across the proteome, which reveal over 50 cryptic pockets that expand targeting options for the design of antivirals. All data and models are freely available online, providing a quantitative structural atlas.

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