posted on 2014-01-15, 00:00authored byMoritz Waldmann, Raffael Jirmann, Ken Hoelscher, Martin Wienke, Felix
C. Niemeyer, Dirk Rehders, Bernd Meyer
Influenza virus attaches itself to
sialic acids on the surface
of epithelial cells of the upper respiratory tract of the host using
its own protein hemagglutinin. Species specificity of influenza virus
is determined by the linkages of the sialic acids. Birds and humans
have α2–3 and α2–6 linked sialic acids,
respectively. Viral hemagglutinin is a homotrimeric receptor, and
thus, tri- or oligovalent ligands should have a high binding affinity.
We describe the in silico design, chemical synthesis
and binding analysis of a trivalent glycopeptide mimetic. This compound
binds to hemagglutinin H5 of avian influenza with a dissociation constant
of KD = 446 nM and an inhibitory constant
of KI = 15 μM. In silico modeling shows that the ligand should also bind to hemagglutinin
H7 of the virus that causes the current influenza outbreak in China.
The trivalent glycopeptide mimetic and analogues have the potential
to block many different influenza viruses.