Replication capacity and susceptibility of nirmatrelvir-resistant mutants to next-generation Mpro inhibitors in a SARS-CoV-2 replicon system

Chieh Wen Lo, Omri Kariv, Chenzhou Hao, Karen Anbro Gammeltoft, Jens Bukh, Judith Gottwein, Michael Westberg, Michael Z. Lin, Shirit Einav*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

There is an ongoing need to expand the anti-SARS-CoV-2 armamentarium to include agents capable of suppressing replication of drug-resistant mutants emerging during monotherapy with approved direct-acting antivirals. Using a subgenomic SARS-CoV-2 replicon system, we studied the RNA replication capacity of nirmatrelvir (NTV)-resistant mutants and their susceptibility to next-generation Mpro inhibitors, including ibuzatrelvir (ITV), ensitrelvir (ETV), and ML2006a4. Our findings revealed that E166V Mpro mutants reduced viral RNA replication, whereas other Mpro mutations retained or increased the replication capacity, suggesting the potential of the latter to dominate under NTV selective pressure. Except for having an advantage against E166A mutants, ITV largely showed the same mutational sensitivity as NTV. ETV was more effective than NTV against E166V mutants but less effective against S144A, E166A, and L167F mutants. ML2006a4 demonstrated the most effective suppression across most mutants (S144A, E166V, S144A + L50F, E166 A/V + L50F, L167F + L50F, and E166A + L167F + L50F). Thus, ML2006a4 represents an attractive investigational candidate against clinically relevant NTV-resistant SARS-CoV-2 mutants.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106022
JournalAntiviral Research
Volume231
Number of pages8
ISSN0166-3542
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

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© 2024 The Authors

Keywords

  • Ensitrelvir
  • Ibuzatrelvir
  • ML2006a4
  • Mpro inhibitors
  • Nirmatrelvir
  • Replication
  • Resistance
  • SARS-CoV-2

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