Global Summit on COVID-19
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Accepted Abstracts

Coronavirus Genomic nsp14-ExoN, Structure, Role, Mechanism, and Potential Application as a Drug Target

Mohammed Tahir*
Department of Biology, University of Sulaimani, Sulaimanyah, Kurdistan, Iraq

Citation: Tahir M (2021) Coronavirus Genomic nsp14-ExoN, Structure, Role, Mechanism, and Potential Application as a Drug Target. SciTech Central COVID-19.

Received: September 29, 2021         Accepted: October 01, 2021         Published: October 01, 2021

Abstract

The recent coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), causing a global pandemic with devastating effects on healthcare and social-economicsystems, has no special antiviral therapies available for human coronaviruses (CoVs). The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus2 (SARS-Cov-2) possesses a non-structural protein (nsp14), with aminoterminal domain coding for a proofreading exoribonuclease (ExoN) that is required for high-fidelity replication. The ability of CoVs during genomereplication and transcription to proofread and exclude mismatched nucleotides has long hindered the development of anti-CoV drugs. The resistance of SARS-CoV-2 to antivirals, especially nucleoside analogs(NAs), shows the need to identify new CoV inhibition targets. Therefore, this review highlights the importance of nsp14-ExoN as a target for inhibition. Also, nucleoside analogs could be used in combination with existing anti-CoV therapeutics to target the proofreading mechanism.
Keywords: Coronavirus, Proofreading, Non-structural protein 14, Exoribonuclease, RNA recombination