Abstract
Ebola virus (EBOV) causes severe hemorrhagic fever with a high mortality rate in humans. In acute infection, an abnormal immune response results in excessive inflammatory cytokines and uncontrolled systemic inflammation that can result in organ damage and multi-organ failure. While vaccines and monoclonal antibody therapies are available, there is an urgent need for effective small-molecule antivirals against EBOV. Here, we report on the optimization of tamoxifen, an EBOV-glycoprotein (GP) binder that inhibits viral entry, using our Sulfur-Fluoride Exchange (SuFEx) click chemistry-based high-throughput medicinal chemistry (HTMC) strategy. Using a “Direct-to-Biology” approach, we generated a focused library of 2,496 tamoxifen analogs overnight and screened them in a cell-based pseudo-EBOV infection assay. The HTMC workflow enabled the development of a potent EBOV entry inhibitor with submicromolar EC50 cellular antiviral activity and more than 50-fold improvement in binding affinity against EBOV-GP compared to the parent compound. Our findings underscore the use of SuFEx-enabled HTMC for rapidly generating and assessing potential therapeutic candidates against viral and immune-mediated diseases in a cell-based assay.
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CITATION STYLE
Dada, L., Nagai, E., Agrawal, S., Wirchnianski, A. S., Wilson, I. A., Chandran, K., & Kitamura, S. (2025). SuFEx-enabled high-throughput medicinal chemistry for developing potent tamoxifen analogs as Ebola virus entry inhibitors. Frontiers in Immunology, 16. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1533037
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