Title | Synthesis and antiviral effect of novel fluoxetine analogues as enterovirus 2C inhibitors. | ||
Author | Manganaro, Roberto; Zonsics, Birgit; Bauer, Lisa; Lorenzo Lopez, Moira; Donselaar, Tim; Zwaagstra, Marleen; Saporito, Fabiana; Ferla, Salvatore; Strating, Jeroen R P M; Coutard, Bruno; Hurdiss, Daniel L; van Kuppeveld, Frank J M; Brancale, Andrea | ||
Journal | Antiviral Res | Publication Year/Month | 2020-Jun |
PMID | 32234539 | PMCID | -N/A- |
Affiliation + expend | 1.School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Cardiff University, King Edward VII Avenue, Cardiff, CF10 3NB, UK. |
Enteroviruses (EV) are a group of positive-strand RNA (+RNA) viruses that include many important human pathogens (e.g. poliovirus, coxsackievirus, echovirus, numbered enteroviruses and rhinoviruses). Fluoxetine was identified in drug repurposing screens as potent inhibitor of enterovirus B and enterovirus D replication. In this paper we are reporting the synthesis and the antiviral effect of a series of fluoxetine analogues. The results obtained offer a preliminary insight into the structure-activity relationship of its chemical scaffold and confirm the importance of the chiral configuration. We identified a racemic fluoxetine analogue, 2b, which showed a similar antiviral activity compared to (S)-fluoxetine. Investigating the stereochemistry of 2b revealed that the S-enantiomer exerts potent antiviral activity and increased the antiviral spectrum compared to the racemic mixture of 2b. In line with the observed antiviral effect, the S-enantiomer displayed a dose-dependent shift in the melting temperature in thermal shift assays, indicative for direct binding to the recombinant 2C protein.