Projects / Programmes
Coronaviral therapeutic target mutagenesis platform for communal treatment evaluation and the development of pan-coronavirus inhibitors
Code |
Science |
Field |
Subfield |
1.07.00 |
Natural sciences and mathematics |
Computer intensive methods and applications |
|
Code |
Science |
Field |
1.01 |
Natural Sciences |
Mathematics |
COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, 3C-like protease, papain-like protease, neuropilin 1, high-throughput virtual screening, inhibitors, in silico design, antivirals, mutagenesis studies, bioinformatics, molecular dynamics, in vitro assays
Data for the last 5 years (citations for the last 10 years) on
October 15, 2025;
Data for score A3 calculation refer to period
2020-2024
Data for ARIS tenders (
04.04.2019 – Programme tender,
archive
)
Database |
Linked records |
Citations |
Pure citations |
Average pure citations |
WoS |
681
|
25,245
|
23,184
|
34.04
|
Scopus |
660
|
27,571
|
25,409
|
38.5
|
Organisations (3)
, Researchers (24)
0794 University of Maribor, Faculty of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering
0105 National Institute of Biology
0481 University of Ljubljana, Biotechnical Faculty
no. |
Code |
Name and surname |
Research area |
Role |
Period |
No. of publicationsNo. of publications |
1. |
39095 |
PhD Miha Bahun |
Biochemistry and molecular biology |
Researcher |
2023 - 2025 |
50 |
2. |
10873 |
PhD Nataša Poklar Ulrih |
Chemistry |
Researcher |
2023 - 2025 |
886 |
3. |
51227 |
PhD Luka Šturm |
Biochemistry and molecular biology |
Researcher |
2024 - 2025 |
53 |
Abstract
From the onset in December 2019, the world has been struggling with a pandemic of COVID -19 disease. The pathogen responsible for the disease is a single-stranded (+ssRNA) positive sense RNA virus from the Coronaviridae family called SARS-CoV-2. The virulence of the pathogen is responsible for the fact that most cases present with mild symptoms. However, a variable percentage of patients develop pneumonia and multiorgan failure that can lead to death, especially without medical assistance. Combined with the high rate of infection, this can cripple the public health system and spiral towards a condition that is difficult to control. After more than three years of battling the situation, the public is well aware of SARS-CoV-2 pathogen, yet this is not the first time we have encountered coronaviral pathogens. Outbreaks of highly pathogenic beta and alpha coronaviruses, including severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) and Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), have occurred before, and similar viruses are widespread in animal host pools and cause high morbidity in livestock (Swine Acute Diarrhea Syndrome Coronavirus or SADS-CoV). Our main concern is 'host jumping', where coronaviruses 'jump' from animal pools to the human host and potentially infect humans, as well as evolutionary selection, which produces mutations and new viral variants with higher virulence and/or transmissibility. Examination of the coronaviral proteome reveals structurally related potential therapeutic targets common to several viral strains. With the emergence of new viral variants, it is evident that a variant-agnostic and, moreover, a pan-coronaviral approach to small molecule drug development for similar situations in the future will be very valuable. Moreover, a quick and informative approach to study prospective viral mutations before they occur in the population, would be of immense value. The proposed project therefore invests heavily in developing experimentally supported in silico viral mutagenesis platform. The goal is to highlight the current viral mutation impact on the action of antiviral compounds and study the effect of future yet-to-be seen viral mutations on potential viral therapeutic targets and consequently on antiviral drugs. Using all the conglomerated and systematized data, the project will proceed to antiviral medicinal chemistry, focusing on three prominent therapeutic targets. The project will develop novel coronaviral main- as well as papain-like protease inhibitors, with a focus on the activity against multiple coronaviruses. Last but not least, the proposed research project will investigate spike protein binding of SARS-CoV-2 variants from a human host cell perspective, looking at the neuropilin-1 coreceptor as a potential target for inhibitor and molecular probe design. The developed compounds will be biologically evaluated in vitro on isolated proteins as well as studied on infected cell lines.