. Covid-19 is a once in a generation epidemic that has had dire, destabilizing impacts across the world. While remdesivir has emerged as the only drug with proven efficacy, its widespread distribution has been plagued by supply-shortages. Careful review of pre-clinical data evidence that these problems largely derive from the poorly optimized phosphate pro-drug moieties on remdesivir, which ultimately make manufacturing remdesivir more difficult. Careful review of the literature indicates that, its parent nucleoside, GS-441524, is likely the more optimal Covid-19 drug. We hypothesize that GS-441524 is pharmacodynamically equivalent drug to remdesivir, in its ability to generate active nucleotide triphosphate to inhibit the SARS-CoV-2 RNA polymerase. In addition to GS-441524 being significantly easier to synthesize, we contend that its direct administration would enable homogenous tissue distribution of active nucleotide triphosphate inhibitor compared to remdesivir; higher levels of inhibitor would ultimately be achieved in lung epithelial cells most afflicted by SARS-CoV-2. This proposal will make fundamental biochemical advances at the in vitro level and therapeutic advancements at the in vivo level. We will compare the rates bioactivation of GS-4441524 and remdesivir across a broad panel of primary human cell types and delineate the exact molecular mechanism and enzymes which bio-transform remdesivir and GS-441524 into the active triphosphate species. At the same time, we will establish pharmacodynamic equivalence between GS-441524 and remdesivir in mice and non-human primates. Finally, we will demonstrate that GS-441524 is ultimately superior to remdesivir in vivo for generating active triphosphate inhibitor, when each is administered at their maximum tolerated doses. Should our hypotheses prove correct, these data will support GS-441524 for IND and clinical trials.
. Covid-19 is a once-in-a generation pandemic with limited therapeutic options. Remdesivir has emerged as a therapy of choice, but its implementation is limited by difficult manufacturing, supply shortages, and poor distribution; such factors ultimately derive from its poorly designed pro-drug design. The goal of this proposal is to demonstrate pharmacodynamic equivalence of the simpler parent nucleoside GS-441524 with Remdesivir and to validate it as a superior drug for the delivery of bioactive anti-viral trinucleotide in the tissues most impacted by the disease, such as the lung epithelial cells.