The COVID-19 pandemic is still active around the globe despite the newly introduced vaccines. Hence, finding effective medications or repurposing available ones could offer great help during this serious situation. During our anti-COVID-19 investigation of microbial natural products (MNPs), we came across α-rubromycin, an antibiotic derived from ATCC19743, which was able to suppress the catalytic activity (IC = 5.4 µM and = 3.22 µM) of one of the viral key enzymes (i.e., M). However, it showed high cytotoxicity toward normal human fibroblasts (CC = 16.7 µM). To reduce the cytotoxicity of this microbial metabolite, we utilized a number of in silico tools (ensemble docking, molecular dynamics simulation, binding free energy calculation) to propose a novel scaffold having the main pharmacophoric features to inhibit M with better drug-like properties and reduced/minimal toxicity. Nevertheless, reaching this novel scaffold synthetically is a time-consuming process, particularly at this critical time. Instead, this scaffold was used as a template to explore similar molecules among the FDA-approved medications that share its main pharmacophoric features with the aid of pharmacophore-based virtual screening software. As a result, cromoglicic acid ( cromolyn) was found to be the best hit, which, upon in vitro M testing, was 4.5 times more potent (IC = 1.1 µM and = 0.68 µM) than α-rubromycin, with minimal cytotoxicity toward normal human fibroblasts (CC > 100 µM). This report highlights the potential of MNPs in providing unprecedented scaffolds with a wide range of therapeutic efficacy. It also revealed the importance of cheminformatics tools in speeding up the drug discovery process, which is extremely important in such a critical situation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8229550PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph14060541DOI Listing

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