Cellular Mechanism of Oxysterol-Binding Protein (OSBP) in Viral Proliferation: A Chemical Biology Approach
Project Number3R01AI154274-04S1
Contact PI/Project LeaderBURGETT, ANTHONY WG
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA HLTH SCIENCES CTR
Description
Abstract Text
The current COVID-19 crisis starkly illustrates the need to develop new modalities for the
therapeutic treatment of pathogenic single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) viruses, including against
novel viruses that have yet to emerge. Human oxysterol-binding protein (OSBP) has recently
been determined to be a critical mediator in the replication of a broad spectrum of ssRNA viral
human pathogens, including the enteroviruses, rhinovirus, hepatitis C, Zika virus, Dengue fever
viruses, and coronaviruses. OSBP is an ER-located, non-enzymatic protein reported to function
as an important lipid sensor and lipid transporter in eukaryotic cells. Published research, including
our own recent publications, has established the antiviral activity of structurally-diverse OSBP-
targeting small molecules against multiple RNA pathogenic viruses. These discoveries present
the opportunity for a paradigm shift in antiviral drug development: potentially drug targeting a
human host protein, OSBP, that is required for viral proliferation of a broad-spectrum of RNA
viruses, as opposed to targeting viral proteins present in individual viruses. We have discovered
that transient, low dose treatment with the OSBP-targeting compound OSW-1-compound induces
a longterm, multigenerational repression of OSBP, and the cells with repressed OSBP show a
pronounced inhibition of ssRNA viral replication. Our preliminary results show that the OSW-1-
compound has prophylactic antiviral activity at low nanomolar concentrations against several
ssRNA viruses, including against one coronavirus tested. The longterm repression of OSBP,
triggered by OSW-1, has no effect on cellular division, viability, or morphology.
The purpose of this proposal is to understand the cellular role of OSBP in innate antiviral
response. Our preliminary results show that OSBP: 1) regulates mTORC1 activity, 2) induces
autophagy; 3) slows global protein translation; and 4) activates alternative splicing nonsense-
mediated decay (AS-NMD) process, which is an RNA regulatory process. All of these OSBP-
involved cellular processes would limit ssRNA viral replication individually, but there is little insight
into the organization of these systems to establish a coordinated antiviral response.Our overall
hypothesis is that OSBP serves in a major regulatory role to coordinate a multifaceted innate
antiviral response to ssRNA infection. We propose a complete model of how OSBP senses early-
stage viral infection and then triggers a multisystem response to block viral replication in cells,
including through modulating mTOR1C activity and the AS-NMD system.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative:
The proposed research will define the cellular biology of the oxysterol-binding protein (OSBP) in
viral proliferation. OSBP has been identified as a critical mediator in the replication of RNA
pathogenic viruses, including coronaviruses. These viruses are a major cause of human sickness
and mortality, and therefore the proposed research is relevant to public health and relevant to the
NIH's mission of reducing illness and disability.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
2019-nCoVAlternative SplicingAnti-viral ResponseAutophagocytosisBiologicalBiologyCOVID-19 pandemicCell PhysiologyCellsCellular biologyChemicalsComplexCoronavirusCoronavirus InfectionsDengue VirusDiseaseDoseDrug TargetingEnterovirusEukaryotic CellFamilyFamily PicornaviridaeFlavivirusFoundationsFutureGenerationsGoalsHepatitis CHumanIndividualInfectionInnate Immune ResponseLipidsMediatingMediatorMembraneMessenger RNAMissionModalityModelingMorphologyNonsense-Mediated DecayPathogenicityPathway interactionsProcessProgram DevelopmentProliferatingProteinsPublic HealthPublicationsPublishingRNARNA VirusesRNA replicationReportingRepressionResearchRhinovirusRoleSystemTestingTherapeuticTherapeutic InterventionTranslationsUnited States National Institutes of HealthViralViral PhysiologyViral ProteinsVirusVirus DiseasesVirus ReplicationWorkZika Virusantiviral drug developmentantiviral immunitycholesterol-binding proteindesigndisabilitydrug developmenthuman pathogeninsightmortalitynanomolarnovel virusoxysterol binding proteinpathogenic virusprophylacticprotein functionresponsesensorsmall moleculetherapeutic lead compound
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
CFDA Code
855
DUNS Number
878648294
UEI
GY8NMUZQXVS7
Project Start Date
08-April-2021
Project End Date
31-March-2026
Budget Start Date
01-April-2024
Budget End Date
31-March-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$17,416
Direct Costs
$12,298
Indirect Costs
$5,118
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
$17,416
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 3R01AI154274-04S1
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