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1.
Preprint in English | bioRxiv | ID: ppbiorxiv-475820

ABSTRACT

The complement system has been heavily implicated in severe COVID-19 with clinical studies revealing widespread gene induction, deposition, and activation. However, the mechanism by which complement is activated in this disease remains incompletely understood. Herein we examined the relationship between SARS-CoV-2 and complement by inoculating the virus in lepirudin-anticoagulated human blood. This caused progressive C5a production after 30 minutes and 24 hours, which was blocked entirely by inhibitors for factor B, C3, C5, and heparan sulfate. However, this phenomenon could not be replicated in cell-free plasma, highlighting the requirement for cell surface deposition of complement and interactions with heparan sulfate. Additional functional analysis revealed that complement-dependent granulocyte and monocyte activation was delayed. Indeed, C5aR1 internalisation and CD11b upregulation on these cells only occurred after 24 hours. Thus, SARS-CoV-2 is a non-canonical complement activator that triggers the alternative pathway through interactions with heparan sulfate.

2.
Preprint in English | bioRxiv | ID: ppbiorxiv-169334

ABSTRACT

Heparan sulfate (HS) is a cell surface polysaccharide recently identified as a co-receptor with the ACE2 protein for recognition of the S1 spike protein on SARS-CoV-2 virus, providing a tractable new target for therapeutic intervention. Clinically-used heparins demonstrate inhibitory activity, but world supplies are limited, necessitating alternative solutions. Synthetic HS mimetic pixatimod is a drug candidate for cancer with immunomodulatory and heparanase-inhibiting properties. Here we show that pixatimod binds to and destabilizes the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein receptor binding domain (S1-RBD), and directly inhibits its binding to human ACE2, consistent with molecular modelling identification of multiple molecular contacts and overlapping pixatimod and ACE2 binding sites. Assays with multiple clinical isolates of live SARS-CoV-2 virus show that pixatimod potently inhibits infection of monkey Vero E6 and human bronchial epithelial cells at concentrations within its safe therapeutic dose range. Furthermore, in a K18-hACE2 mouse model pixatimod demonstrates that pixatimod markedly attenuates SARS-CoV-2 viral titer and COVID-19-like symptoms. This demonstration of potent anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity establishes proof-of-concept for targeting the HS-Spike protein-ACE2 axis with synthetic HS mimetics. Together with other known activities of pixatimod our data provides a strong rationale for its clinical investigation as a potential multimodal therapeutic to address the COVID-19 pandemic.

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