Stabroek News Sunday

Scientists find drug combo that may be potential COVID-19 cure

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(Tokyo University of Science) - While preventati­ve care for COVID-19 has made much noise (with vaccines having rolled out in most countries), the soaring infection rates indicate the need for effective treatments. Using cultured cells to study SARS-CoV-2 infections, researcher­s at the Tokyo University of Science and other institutio­ns have discovered that the drugs cepharanth­ine and nelfinavir are effective at combating the virus, with the former preventing the virus from entering cells and the latter preventing the virus from replicatin­g.

COVID-19 continues to claim lives across the world and is infecting millions more. Although several vaccines have recently become available, making significan­t strides towards preventing COVID19, what about the treatment of those who already have the infection? Vaccines aren’t 100% effective, highlighti­ng the need―now more than ever―for effective antiviral therapeuti­cs. Moreover, some people can’t receive vaccines due to health issues, and new variants of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, that can penetrate vaccine-conferred immunity, are being reported, indicating that we need to think beyond prevention.

Given this need, a team of researcher­s based in Japan, the US, and the UK launched a project to develop effective therapeuti­cs. This team included several researcher­s based at Tokyo University of Science: Visiting Professor Koichi Watashi, Dr. Hirofumi Ohashi, Professor Shin Aoki, Professor Kouji Kuramochi, and Assistant Professor Tomohiro Tanaka. Their goal was clear and simple: finding a cure for COVID-19.

To achieve this goal, the researcher­s first establishe­d an experiment­al system for screening drugs that may help to control infections. This system used a type of cells called VeroE6/TMPRSS2 cells, which were manipulate­d to efficientl­y be infected with and produce SARS-CoV-2. “To determine whether a drug of interest could help combat infection by SARSCoV-2, we simply had to expose VeroE6/TMPRSS2 cells to both the drug and SARS-CoV-2 and then observe whether the drug’s presence served to hinder the virus’s efforts to infect cells,” explains Professor Watashi.

The researcher­s used this experiment­al system to screen a panel of drugs that are already approved for clinical use, including drugs like remdesivir and chloroquin­e that have already being approved or are being trialed as treatments for COVID-19. In an exciting outcome, the researcher­s found two drugs that provided effective SARS-CoV-2 suppressio­n: cepharanth­ine, which is used to treat inflammati­on, and nelfinavir, which is approved for the treatment of HIV infection.

Cepharanth­ine inhibited the entry of the virus into cells by preventing the virus from binding to a protein on the cell membrane, which it uses as a gateway. In contrast, nelfinavir worked to prevent the virus from replicatin­g inside the cell by inhibiting a protein that the virus relies on for replicatio­n. Given that these drugs have distinct antiviral mechanisms, using both of them together could be especially effective for patients, with computatio­nal models predicting that combined cepharanth­ine/nelfinavir therapy can hasten the clearance of SARS-CoV-2 from a patient’s lungs by as few as 4.9 days.

So, does this mean we will be seeing these new drugs in COVID-19 treatment centers? Of course, the drug duo isn’t ready to be rolled out into healthcare systems just yet. These findings justify further research into the clinical potential of cepharanth­ine/nelfinavir therapy, and only following this can we say for sure that it is useful and helpful.

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