SDSC Supercomputers Help Model Potential SARS-CoV2 Protease Inhibitors for COVID-19

December 2, 2020

Dec. 2, 2020 — A team of San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) researchers recently created a pharmacophore model and conducted data mining of the database of drugs approved by the U.S. Federal Drug Administration (FDA) to find potential inhibitors of papain-like protease of SARS-CoV2, one of the main viral proteins responsible for COVID-19.

The study, recently published in PeerJ, found that among the drugs computationally selected were those currently used to inhibit HIV, Hepatitis C, and cytomesalovirus (CMV) as well as a set of drugs that have recently demonstrated positive effects on combatting COVID-19.

The SDSC team included Igor Tsigelny, a researcher in structural biology, molecular modeling, and bioinformatics; Valentina Kouznetsova, who has expertise in protein modeling, metabolomics, biomarkers of diseases, and cancer diagnostics; Mark Miller (bioinformatics, phylogenetics eukaryotic cell biology, and metabolic engineering); and Mahidhar Tatineni, SDSC’s User Support Group Lead and a programmer analyst for high-performance computing. Tsigelny is also affiliated with the UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center.

SDSC’s Comet supercomputer was used for the computational docking of the selected drugs, covering a combined 4.3 million docking poses. After careful analysis, the researchers determined the most optimal compounds for simulated docking, which refers to the way drugs bind to papain-like protease.

“Once we completed the docking computations, we discovered that only some drugs had seemingly the best docking energies to bind viral protein that can help to fight COVID-19,” said Kouznetsova.

Tsigelny, Kouznetsova, Miller, Tatineni, Zhang, SDSC/UC San Diego.
This compound docking was completed on the Comet supercomputer for drug compounds selected by a pharmacophore-based search of possible drug candidates in the conformational database of drugs approved by the FDA for other uses as having the best docking energies to bind the COVID-19 viral protein.

According to Tsigelny, some of the drugs selected by the pharmacophore search are already being experimentally tested for other viruses. He noted that that 11 compounds have been shown to be effective in treating other viruses – amodiaquine, chloroquine, sorafenib, dasatenib, hydroxychloroquine, bortezomib, topotecan, manidipine, lovastatin, cefitinib, and ritonavir.

Earlier this year, Kouznetsova and Tsigelny created a similar pharmacophore model that involved the data mining of the conformational database of FDA-approved drugs. With this earlier model, they identified 64 compounds as potential inhibitors of another SARS-CoV2 viral protein: main protease, also one of the main proteins responsible for COVID-19. Among the compounds selected then were two HIV protease inhibitors, two hepatitis C protease inhibitors, and three drugs that have already shown positive results in testing with COVID-19. Details of that study can be found here.

Support for this research included the San Diego Supercomputer Center. Comet is funded by the National Science Foundation (ACI #1341698). Mark Miller was supported by National Institutes of Health (R01 GM126463). Other authors received no funding for this work. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

About SDSC

The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) is a leader and pioneer in high-performance and data-intensive computing, providing cyberinfrastructure resources, services, and expertise to the national research community, academia, and industry. Located on the UC San Diego campus, SDSC supports hundreds of multidisciplinary programs spanning a wide variety of domains, from astrophysics and earth sciences to disease research and drug discovery. In late 2020 SDSC will launch its newest National Science Foundation-funded supercomputer, Expanse.

At over twice the performance of CometExpanse supports SDSC’s theme of ‘Computing without Boundaries’ with a data-centric architecture, public cloud integration, and state-of-the art GPUs for incorporating experimental facilities and edge computing.


Source: UC San Diego

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