Published November 27, 2020 | Version 1
Dataset Open

SARS-CoV-2 NSP13; A Target Enabling Package

  • 1. Centre for Medicines Discovery, Old Road Campus Research Building, University of Oxford, Roosevelt Dr, Headington,, Oxford, OX3 7DQ
  • 2. Diamond Light Source, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Fermi Avenue, Didcot, OX11 0DE.

Description

To contribute towards the development of novel anti-viral therapeutics targeting the current and future emerging coronavirus threats, the Gileadi lab at the University of Oxford, together with the XChem team at Diamond Light Source, have teamed up to perform a crystallographic fragment screen against SARS-CoV-2 NSP13 helicase.  NSP13 is believed to act in concert with the replication-transcription complex (NSP7/NSP82/NSP12), possibly being involved in either disrupting downstream RNA secondary structures or template switching, and plays an essential role in the life cycle of SARS-CoV-2.

This TEP includes expression clones and methods for producing the full length NSP13, and fluorescence-based activity assays suitable for compound screening. We provide a crystallisation system that produces reproducible crystals that diffract to high resolution, and have performed a crystallographic fragment screen revealing 63 fragment hits across 51 datasets. The fragment hits include several hits in pockets predicted to be of functional importance, including the nucleotide and nucleic acid binding sites, opening the way to development of novel antiviral agents.

Notes

This document represents version 1 of the TEP datasheet and includes all updates on the project as of November 2020. For more information about TEPs and the TEP Programme, please visit https://www.cmd.ox.ac.uk/TEP

Files

NSP13 TEP_v1.pdf

Files (2.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:d6c065d62ff4b11f9338510db9bdf819
2.0 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Funding

A UK Hub to Catalyse Open Target Discovery. 106169
Wellcome Trust