Engineering Protease-Resistant Peptides To Inhibit Human Parainfluenza Viral Respiratory Infection

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY(2021)

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摘要
The lower respiratory tract infections affecting children worldwide are in large part caused by the parainfluenza viruses (HPIVs), particularly HPIV3, along with human metapneumovirus and respiratory syncytial virus, enveloped negative-strand RNA viruses. There are no vaccines for these important human pathogens, and existing treatments have limited or no efficacy. Infection by HPIV is initiated by viral glycoprotein-mediated fusion between viral and host cell membranes. A viral fusion protein (F), once activated in proximity to a target cell, undergoes a series of conformational changes that first extend the trimer subunits to allow insertion of the hydrophobic domains into the target cell membrane and then refold the trimer into a stable postfusion state, driving the merger of the viral and host cell membranes. Lipopeptides derived from the C-terminal heptad repeat (HRC) domain of HPIV3 F inhibit infection by interfering with the structural transitions of the trimeric F assembly. Clinical application of this strategy, however, requires improving the in vivo stability of antiviral peptides. We show that the HRC peptide backbone can be modified via partial replacement of alpha-amino acid residues with beta-amino acid residues to generate alpha/beta-peptides that retain antiviral activity but are poor protease substrates. Relative to a conventional alpha-lipopeptide, our best alpha/beta-lipopeptide exhibits improved persistence in vivo and improved anti-HPIV3 antiviral activity in animals.
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