Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Dual Inhibitory Potential of Conessine Against HIV and SARS-CoV-2: Structure-Guided Molecular Docking Analysis of Critical Viral Targets

View through CrossRef
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) and SARS-CoV-2 continue to co-burden global health, motivating discovery of broad-spectrum small molecules. Conessine, a steroidal alkaloid, has reported membrane-active and antimicrobial properties but remains underexplored as a dual antiviral chemotype. To interrogate conessine’s multi-target antiviral potential against key enzymatic and entry determinants of HIV-1 and SARS-CoV-2 and to benchmark performance versus approved comparators. Eight targets were modeled: HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT, 3V81), protease (PR, 1HVR), integrase (IN, 3LPT), gp120–gp41 trimer (4NCO); and SARS-CoV-2 main protease (Mpro, 6LU7), papain-like protease (PLpro, 6W9C), RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp, 7BV2), spike RBD (6M0J). Ligands (conessine; positive controls: dolutegravir for HIV-1, nirmatrelvir for SARS-CoV-2) were prepared with standard protonation, minimized, and docked using AutoDock Vina v 1.2.0exhaustiveness 4; 20 poses). Binding modes were profiled in 2D/3D. Protocol robustness was verified by re-docking co-crystallized ligands (RMSD ≤ 2.0 Å). Atomistic MD (explicit TIP3P, OPLS4, 300 K/1 atm, NPT; 50–100 ns) assessed pose stability (RMSD/RMSF), pocket compaction (Rg, volume), and interaction persistence; MM/GBSA provided qualitative energy decomposition. ADMET was predicted in silico. Conessine showed coherent, hydrophobically anchored binding across both viral panels. Best docking scores (kcal·mol−1) were: HIV-1—PR −6.910, RT −6.672, IN −5.733; SARS-CoV-2—spike RBD −7.025, Mpro −5.745, RdRp −5.737, PLpro −5.024. Interaction maps were dominated by alkyl/π-alkyl packing to catalytic corridors (e.g., PR Ile50/Val82, RT Tyr181/Val106; Mpro His41/Met49; RBD L455/F486/Y489) with occasional carbon-/water-mediated H-bonds guiding orientation. MD sustained low ligand RMSD (typically ≤1.6–2.2 Å) and damped RMSF at catalytic loops, indicating pocket rigidification; MM/GBSA trends (≈ −30 to −40 kcal·mol−1, dispersion-driven) supported persistent nonpolar stabilization. Benchmarks behaved as expected: dolutegravir bound strongly to IN (−6.070) and PR (−7.319) with stable MD; nirmatrelvir was specific for Mpro and displayed weaker, discontinuous engagement at PLpro/RdRp/RBD under identical settings. ADMET suggested conessine has excellent permeability/BBB access (high logP), but liabilities include poor aqueous solubility, predicted hERG risk, and CYP2D6 substrate dependence.Conessine operates as a hydrophobic, multi-target wedge with the most favorable computed engagement at HIV-1 PR/RT and the SARS-CoV-2 spike RBD, while maintaining stable poses at Mpro and RdRp. The scaffold merits medicinal-chemistry optimization to improve solubility and de-risk cardiotoxicity/CYP interactions, followed by biochemical and cell-based validation against prioritized targets.
Title: Dual Inhibitory Potential of Conessine Against HIV and SARS-CoV-2: Structure-Guided Molecular Docking Analysis of Critical Viral Targets
Description:
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) and SARS-CoV-2 continue to co-burden global health, motivating discovery of broad-spectrum small molecules.
Conessine, a steroidal alkaloid, has reported membrane-active and antimicrobial properties but remains underexplored as a dual antiviral chemotype.
To interrogate conessine’s multi-target antiviral potential against key enzymatic and entry determinants of HIV-1 and SARS-CoV-2 and to benchmark performance versus approved comparators.
Eight targets were modeled: HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT, 3V81), protease (PR, 1HVR), integrase (IN, 3LPT), gp120–gp41 trimer (4NCO); and SARS-CoV-2 main protease (Mpro, 6LU7), papain-like protease (PLpro, 6W9C), RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp, 7BV2), spike RBD (6M0J).
Ligands (conessine; positive controls: dolutegravir for HIV-1, nirmatrelvir for SARS-CoV-2) were prepared with standard protonation, minimized, and docked using AutoDock Vina v 1.
2.
0exhaustiveness 4; 20 poses).
Binding modes were profiled in 2D/3D.
Protocol robustness was verified by re-docking co-crystallized ligands (RMSD ≤ 2.
0 Å).
Atomistic MD (explicit TIP3P, OPLS4, 300 K/1 atm, NPT; 50–100 ns) assessed pose stability (RMSD/RMSF), pocket compaction (Rg, volume), and interaction persistence; MM/GBSA provided qualitative energy decomposition.
ADMET was predicted in silico.
Conessine showed coherent, hydrophobically anchored binding across both viral panels.
Best docking scores (kcal·mol−1) were: HIV-1—PR −6.
910, RT −6.
672, IN −5.
733; SARS-CoV-2—spike RBD −7.
025, Mpro −5.
745, RdRp −5.
737, PLpro −5.
024.
Interaction maps were dominated by alkyl/π-alkyl packing to catalytic corridors (e.
g.
, PR Ile50/Val82, RT Tyr181/Val106; Mpro His41/Met49; RBD L455/F486/Y489) with occasional carbon-/water-mediated H-bonds guiding orientation.
MD sustained low ligand RMSD (typically ≤1.
6–2.
2 Å) and damped RMSF at catalytic loops, indicating pocket rigidification; MM/GBSA trends (≈ −30 to −40 kcal·mol−1, dispersion-driven) supported persistent nonpolar stabilization.
Benchmarks behaved as expected: dolutegravir bound strongly to IN (−6.
070) and PR (−7.
319) with stable MD; nirmatrelvir was specific for Mpro and displayed weaker, discontinuous engagement at PLpro/RdRp/RBD under identical settings.
ADMET suggested conessine has excellent permeability/BBB access (high logP), but liabilities include poor aqueous solubility, predicted hERG risk, and CYP2D6 substrate dependence.
Conessine operates as a hydrophobic, multi-target wedge with the most favorable computed engagement at HIV-1 PR/RT and the SARS-CoV-2 spike RBD, while maintaining stable poses at Mpro and RdRp.
The scaffold merits medicinal-chemistry optimization to improve solubility and de-risk cardiotoxicity/CYP interactions, followed by biochemical and cell-based validation against prioritized targets.

Related Results

The Hidden Problem of Cross-Reactivity: Challenges in HIV Testing During the COVID-19 Era: A Systematic Review
The Hidden Problem of Cross-Reactivity: Challenges in HIV Testing During the COVID-19 Era: A Systematic Review
Abstract Introduction Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV2) surface glycoproteins, including shared epitope motifs, sho...
The Potential of Medicinal Plants and Bioactive Compounds in the Fight Against COVID-19
The Potential of Medicinal Plants and Bioactive Compounds in the Fight Against COVID-19
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), a novel coronavirus , is causing a serious worldwide COVID-19 pandemic. The emergence of strains with rapid spread and...
Capítulo 6 – HIV-AIDS, como tratar, o que fazer e o que não fazer durante o tratamento?
Capítulo 6 – HIV-AIDS, como tratar, o que fazer e o que não fazer durante o tratamento?
A infecção pelo vírus do HIV pode ocorrer de diversas maneiras, tendo sua principal forma a via sexual por meio do sexo desprotegido. O vírus do HIV fica em um período de incubação...
Abstract 1821: Conessine inhibits cell proliferation, migration and invasion, and induces apoptosis in liver cancer cells
Abstract 1821: Conessine inhibits cell proliferation, migration and invasion, and induces apoptosis in liver cancer cells
Abstract Cancer-related deaths from hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) rank first worldwide. Although many attempts have been made to treat HCC, the survival rate remain...
Mutations in SARS-CoV
Mutations in SARS-CoV
The coronavirus family is named for the large spike protein molecules found on the pathogen exterior, which give the virus a crown-like appearance, the coronavirus genome is the bi...
EPD Electronic Pathogen Detection v1
EPD Electronic Pathogen Detection v1
Electronic pathogen detection (EPD) is a non - invasive, rapid, affordable, point- of- care test, for Covid 19 resulting from infection with SARS-CoV-2 virus. EPD scanning techno...
From SARS and MERS CoVs to SARS‐CoV‐2: Moving toward more biased codon usage in viral structural and nonstructural genes
From SARS and MERS CoVs to SARS‐CoV‐2: Moving toward more biased codon usage in viral structural and nonstructural genes
AbstractBackgroundSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‐CoV‐2) is an emerging disease with fatal outcomes. In this study, a fundamental knowledge gap question is to...

Back to Top