rupintrivir and Gastroenteritis

rupintrivir has been researched along with Gastroenteritis* in 2 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for rupintrivir and Gastroenteritis

ArticleYear
Recent Advances in the Discovery of Norovirus Therapeutics.
    Journal of medicinal chemistry, 2015, Dec-24, Volume: 58, Issue:24

    Noroviruses are members of the family Caliciviridae. Norovirus infections are a global health burden that impacts >20 million individuals annually in the U.S. alone. Noroviruses are associated with high morbidity among vulnerable populations, particularly immunocompromised patients. This perspective highlights recent developments related to the discovery and development of norovirus-specific small-molecule therapeutics as well as recent advances in our understanding of norovirus biology and pathogenesis. Most of the work in this area is at the early discovery stage and has been primarily focused on inhibitors of norovirus 3C-like protease and RNA dependent RNA polymerase. However, recent discoveries emanating from basic studies in norovirus research have resulted in the identification of new host-related drug targets that can be exploited. A repurposed compound has been advanced to human clinical studies.

    Topics: Animals; Antiviral Agents; Caliciviridae Infections; Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors; Gastroenteritis; Genes, Viral; Humans; Norovirus; RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase; Virus Internalization

2015

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for rupintrivir and Gastroenteritis

ArticleYear
Advanced simulations and screening to repurposing a 3C protease inhibitor against the rupintrivir-resistant human norovirus-induced gastroenteritis.
    Journal of molecular graphics & modelling, 2023, Volume: 118

    Human norovirus (HuNoV) causes acute viral gastroenteritis in all age groups, and dehydration and severe diarrhea in the elderly. The World Health Organization reports ∼1.45 million deaths from acute gastroenteritis annually in the world. Rupintrivir, an inhibitory medicine against the human rhinovirus C3 protease, has been reported to inhibit HuNoV 3C protease. However, several HuNoV 3C protease mutations have been revealed to reduce the susceptibility of HuNoV to rupintrivir. The structural details behind rupintrivir-resistance of these single-point mutations (A105V and I109V) are not still clear. Hence, in this study, a combination of computational techniques were used to determine the rupintrivir-resistance mechanism and to propose an inhibitor against wild-type and mutant HuNoV 3C protease through structure-based virtual screening. Dynamic structural results indicated the unstable binding of rupintrivir at the cleft binding site of the wild-type and mutant 3C proteases, leading to its detachment. Our findings presented that the domain II of the HuNoV 3C protease had a critical role in binding of inhibitory molecules. Binding energy computations, steered molecular dynamics and umbrella sampling simulations confirmed that amentoflavone, the novel suggested inhibitor, strongly binds to the cleft site of all protease models and has a good structural stability in the complex system along the molecular dynamic simulations. Our in silico study proposed the selected compound as a potential inhibitor against the HuNoV 3C protease. However, additional experimental and clinical studies are required to corroborate the therapeutic efficacy of the compound.

    Topics: Antiviral Agents; Gastroenteritis; Humans; Norovirus; Peptide Hydrolases; Protease Inhibitors; Viral Proteins

2023