ΊμΑμ½νΉΟ±¨ chemist partners with area universities on $3.7M COVID-19 research

A ΊμΑμ½νΉΟ±¨ scientist is part of a team that has been awarded a five-year, $3.7 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to further research a treatment for COVID-19.

Dr. Bill Groutas, medicinal chemist at ΊμΑμ½νΉΟ±¨, is working with Dr. Kyeong-Ok β€œKC” Chang, a virologist at Kansas State University's College of Veterinary Medicine; Dr. Yunjeong Kim, a veterinary virologist at Kansas State; Dr. Stanley Perlman, professor of microbiology and immunology from the University of Iowa; and Dr. Scott Lovell, a structural biologist at the University of Kansas. Chang is the principal investigator.

On Aug. 30, the NIH announced the award for the project, which aims to complete development of a drug for preclinical studies, which will ultimately lead to a COVID-specific antiviral therapeutic treatment. It is led by principal investigator, Kyeong-Ok β€œKC” Chang, a virologist at Kansas State’s College of Veterinary Medicine. 

 β€œWe have identified a series of compounds that are effective in an animal model of SARS-COV-2 infection, working in collaboration with research groups at KSU, KU and the University of Iowa,” Groutas said. β€œA drug candidate is being advanced along the development pipeline by  as a COVID-19 parenteral therapeutic.”

The group has been working on antiviral drug development against both human and animal coronaviruses for more than a decade, focusing on protease inhibitors. Earlier this year, they . Therapeutic treatments are different than vaccines in that they help people who have contracted the virus, whereas vaccines aim to prevent people from getting sick. 

β€œThe new NIH grant will allow us to continue our work on the discovery and development of new drugs that can be deployed against SARS-CoV-2 infection, including drugs that are effective when administered orally,” Groutas said. 


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