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Review Article

Novel 2019 coronavirus structure, mechanism of action, antiviral drug promises and rule out against its treatment

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon &
Pages 3409-3418 | Received 04 Apr 2020, Accepted 16 Apr 2020, Published online: 30 Apr 2020
 

Abstract

In the past two decades, the world has faced several infectious disease outbreaks. Ebola, Influenza A (H1N1), SARS, MERS, and Zika virus have had a massive global impact in terms of economic disruption, the strain on local and global public health. Most recently, the global outbreak of novel coronavirus 2019 (SARS-CoV-2) that causes COVID-19 is a newly discovered virus from the coronavirus family in Wuhan city, China, known to be a great threat to the public health systems. As of 15 April 2020, The Johns Hopkins University estimated that the COVID-19 affected more than two million people, resulting in a death toll above 130,000 around the world. Infected people in Europe and America correspond about 40% and 30% of the total reported cases respectively. At this moment only few Asian countries have controlled the disease, but a second wave of new infections is expected. Predicting inhibitor and target to the COVID-19 is an urgent need to protect human from the disease. Therefore, a protocol to identify anti-COVID-19 candidate based on computer-aided drug design is urgently needed. Thousands of compounds including approved drugs and drugs in the clinical trial are available in the literature. In practice, experimental techniques can measure the time and space average properties but they cannot be captured the structural variation of the COVID-19 during the interaction of inhibitor. Computer simulation is particularly suitable to complement experiments to elucidate conformational changes at the molecular level which are related to inhibition process of the COVID-19. Therefore, computational simulation is essential tool to elucidate the phenomenon. The structure-based virtual screening computational approach will be used to filter the best drugs from the literature, the investigate the structural variation of COVID-19 with the interaction of the best inhibitor is a fundamental step to design new drugs and vaccines which can combat the coronavirus. This mini-review will address novel coronavirus structure, mechanism of action, and trial test of antiviral drugs in the lab and patients with COVID-19.

Acknowledgements

S.B. is grateful to the Talca University, Chile, for his postdoc award through the “Fondo de Atracción de postdoctorado carácter Internacional” scheme. A.P. appreciates scientific discussions with Małgorzata Figiel from the International Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, Warsaw, Poland.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the National Science Centre, Poland, under Grant number 2017/26/D/NZ1/00466.

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