Efficacy and safety of dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) inhibitors “leflunomide” and “teriflunomide” in Covid-19: A narrative review

Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) is rate-limiting enzyme in biosynthesis of pyrimidone which catalyzes the oxidation of dihydro-orotate to orotate. Orotate is utilized in the biosynthesis of uridine-monophosphate. DHODH inhibitors have shown promise as antiviral agent against Cytomegalovirus, Eb...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of pharmacology 2021-09, Vol.906, p.174233-174233, Article 174233
Hauptverfasser: Kaur, Hardeep, Sarma, Phulen, Bhattacharyya, Anusuya, Sharma, Saurabh, Chhimpa, Neeraj, Prajapat, Manisha, Prakash, Ajay, Kumar, Subodh, Singh, Ashutosh, Singh, Rahul, Avti, Pramod, Thota, Prasad, Medhi, Bikash
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) is rate-limiting enzyme in biosynthesis of pyrimidone which catalyzes the oxidation of dihydro-orotate to orotate. Orotate is utilized in the biosynthesis of uridine-monophosphate. DHODH inhibitors have shown promise as antiviral agent against Cytomegalovirus, Ebola, Influenza, Epstein Barr and Picornavirus. Anti-SARS-CoV-2 action of DHODH inhibitors are also coming up. In this review, we have reviewed the safety and efficacy of approved DHODH inhibitors (leflunomide and teriflunomide) against COVID-19. In target-centered in silico studies, leflunomide showed favorable binding to active site of MPro and spike: ACE2 interface. In artificial-intelligence/machine-learning based studies, leflunomide was among the top 50 ligands targeting spike: ACE2 interaction. Leflunomide is also found to interact with differentially regulated pathways [identified by KEGG (Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes) and reactome pathway analysis of host transcriptome data] in cogena based drug-repurposing studies. Based on GSEA (gene set enrichment analysis), leflunomide was found to target pathways enriched in COVID-19. In vitro, both leflunomide (EC50 41.49 ± 8.8 μmol/L) and teriflunomide (EC50 26 μmol/L) showed SARS-CoV-2 inhibition. In clinical studies, leflunomide showed significant benefit in terms of decreasing the duration of viral shredding, duration of hospital stay and severity of infection. However, no advantage was seen while combining leflunomide and IFN alpha-2a among patients with prolonged post symptomatic viral shredding. Common adverse effects of leflunomide were hyperlipidemia, leucopenia, neutropenia and liver-function alteration. Leflunomide/teriflunomide may serve as an agent of importance to achieve faster virological clearance in COVID-19, however, findings needs to be validated in bigger sized placebo controlled studies. •Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) inhibitors (leflunomide and its metabolite teriflunomide) have shown potential anti-SARS-CoV-2 action.•In silico drug design studies found leflunomide to bind to active site of MPro and spike: ACE2 interface. Artificial-intelligence/machine-learning based studies identified leflunomide as a potential compound against COVID-19.•In vitro settings, both leflunomide (EC50 41.49 ± 8.8 μmol/L) and teriflunomide (EC50 26 μmol/L) inhibited SARS-CoV-2.•In small sized clinical studies, leflunomide showed significant benefit in decreasing “duration of shredding of SARS-CoV
ISSN:0014-2999
1879-0712
DOI:10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174233