'Getting Better'-Is It a Feasible Strategy of Broad Pan-Antiherpesviral Drug Targeting by Using the Nuclear Egress-Directed Mechanism?

Int J Mol Sci. 2024 Feb 29;25(5):2823. doi: 10.3390/ijms25052823.

Abstract

The herpesviral nuclear egress represents an essential step of viral replication efficiency in host cells, as it defines the nucleocytoplasmic release of viral capsids. Due to the size limitation of the nuclear pores, viral nuclear capsids are unable to traverse the nuclear envelope without a destabilization of this natural host-specific barrier. To this end, herpesviruses evolved the regulatory nuclear egress complex (NEC), composed of a heterodimer unit of two conserved viral NEC proteins (core NEC) and a large-size extension of this complex including various viral and cellular NEC-associated proteins (multicomponent NEC). Notably, the NEC harbors the pronounced ability to oligomerize (core NEC hexamers and lattices), to multimerize into higher-order complexes, and, ultimately, to closely interact with the migrating nuclear capsids. Moreover, most, if not all, of these NEC proteins comprise regulatory modifications by phosphorylation, so that the responsible kinases, and additional enzymatic activities, are part of the multicomponent NEC. This sophisticated basis of NEC-specific structural and functional interactions offers a variety of different modes of antiviral interference by pharmacological or nonconventional inhibitors. Since the multifaceted combination of NEC activities represents a highly conserved key regulatory stage of herpesviral replication, it may provide a unique opportunity towards a broad, pan-antiherpesviral mechanism of drug targeting. This review presents an update on chances, challenges, and current achievements in the development of NEC-directed antiherpesviral strategies.

Keywords: NEC-directed mode of action; core and multicomponent NEC extensions; cytomegalovirus (HCMV); essential steps of viral replication; human pathogenic herpesviruses; novel antiviral drug targeting; nuclear egress complex (NEC); strategies of antiviral drug development; viral nucleocytoplasmic capsid egress.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cell Nucleus / metabolism
  • Cytomegalovirus* / metabolism
  • Herpesviridae* / metabolism
  • Nuclear Envelope / metabolism
  • Phosphorylation
  • Simplexvirus / metabolism
  • Viral Proteins / metabolism

Substances

  • Viral Proteins