학술논문

Disrupting autorepression circuitry generates “open-loop lethality” to yield escape-resistant antiviral agents
Document Type
article
Source
Cell. 185(12)
Subject
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Infectious Diseases
Genetics
Infection
Animals
Antiviral Agents
Drug Resistance
Viral
Gene Expression Regulation
Viral
Gene Regulatory Networks
Mice
SARS-CoV-2
Virus Replication
autoregulatory circuit
feedback
nucleic acids
synthetic biology
transcriptional feedback
viral evolution
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Across biological scales, gene-regulatory networks employ autorepression (negative feedback) to maintain homeostasis and minimize failure from aberrant expression. Here, we present a proof of concept that disrupting transcriptional negative feedback dysregulates viral gene expression to therapeutically inhibit replication and confers a high evolutionary barrier to resistance. We find that nucleic-acid decoys mimicking cis-regulatory sites act as "feedback disruptors," break homeostasis, and increase viral transcription factors to cytotoxic levels (termed "open-loop lethality"). Feedback disruptors against herpesviruses reduced viral replication >2-logs without activating innate immunity, showed sub-nM IC50, synergized with standard-of-care antivirals, and inhibited virus replication in mice. In contrast to approved antivirals where resistance rapidly emerged, no feedback-disruptor escape mutants evolved in long-term cultures. For SARS-CoV-2, disruption of a putative feedback circuit also generated open-loop lethality, reducing viral titers by >1-log. These results demonstrate that generating open-loop lethality, via negative-feedback disruption, may yield a class of antimicrobials with a high genetic barrier to resistance.