Based on studies of the atomic-level structure of an enzyme that's  essential for the maturation of adenovirus and how that enzyme becomes  active  conducted at Brookhaven's National Synchrotron Light Source  (NSLS) -- we used computational modeling to search for compounds that  might interfere with this enzyme and tested the best candidates in the  lab."
Out of 140,000 compounds in a national database, the scientists  identified two they expect to be able to turn into antiviral agents to  combat adenovirus.
This research is a great example of the potential for rational drug  design…based on studies of the atomic-level structure of an  enzyme…conducted at Brookhaven's National Synchrotron Light Source.
The need for such antiviral compounds stems from the diversity of  human adenoviruses and their ubiquitous effects, Mangel said.  Adenoviruses cause many types of respiratory diseases (including  outbreaks among military recruits), childhood pneumonias, and eye  infections -- and may even play a role in obesity. They are particularly  dangerous for individuals with impaired immunity, such as transplant  recipients and patients with AIDS.
With more than 50 varieties causing this range of diseases, it's  unlikely scientists will develop a universally effective vaccine to prevent all strains of adenovirus before  infection, Mangel said. But one thing all adenovirus strains share is a  common mechanism of making new virus particles once an infection takes  root. Targeting that mechanism with antiviral drugs -- the approach  taken by the Brookhaven team -- may be a viable way to battle all  adenovirus strains.
Mangel worked with fellow Brookhaven scientists William McGrath and  Vito Graziano, along with Kathy Zabrocka, a student from Stanford  University who was conducting an undergraduate internship in his lab.  The research built on work Mangel's lab initiated years earlier to  decipher the atomic-level structure of the adenovirus proteinase, an  enzyme conserved throughout all strains of the virus that cleaves  proteins during the assembly of new virus particles.
"Once those proteins are cleaved, the newly synthesized virus  particle is infectious," Mangel explained. "If those proteins are not  cleaved, then the infection is aborted. Thus, inhibitors of the  adenovirus proteinase should be effective antiviral agents against all  strains of adenovirus," he said.
Over several years, Mangel's group found that the activity of the  enzyme was highly regulated by two cofactors, a small piece of another  adenovirus protein and the viral DNA. Structures of the enzyme alone and  in the presence of its cofactors, determined by x-ray crystallography  at the NSLS, revealed key regions that could serve as potential targets  for blocking the enzyme's activation or protein-cleaving ability.
"All that remained was to find compounds that bind to these targets to prevent the enzyme from functioning," Mangel said.
To find these compounds, the scientists used a technique called  DOCKing, which entails computationally probing a region of the protein  structure against databases of small molecules to determine which might  bind most strongly. Out of a database of 140,000 potential compounds,  the scientists identified 30 molecules predicted to fit best and ordered  samples to test for inhibitor activity.
Two of the molecules (NSC-36806-left struct;  and NSC37249 right struct) that DOCKing identified turned out to be  excellent inhibitors of the adenovirus proteinase. At the concentrations  that inhibited the adenovirus proteinase, these same compounds did not  inhibit other, similar enzymes. Thus, the compounds appear to be  specific inhibitors of the adenovirus enzyme.
Ref : http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0014579313003876   
The molecules identified are still too large to be delivered as  drugs. So the scientists are working to pare down the size in the design  of a second-generation compound based upon the binding portions of the  two inhibitors. This new molecule is expected to readily enter  adenovirus-infected cells and bind even more tightly to the adenovirus  proteinase.
"This work should pave the way for the development of effective drugs against all types of adenovirus infections," Mangel said...