Peptide inhibitors of hepatitis C virus core oligomerization and virus production Kota, S. and Coito, C. and Mousseau, G. and Lavergne, J.-P. and Strosberg, A. D.,, 90, 1319-1328 (2009), doi = https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.008565-0, publicationName = Microbiology Society, issn = 0022-1317, abstract= Hepatitis C virus (HCV) nucleocapsid assembly requires dimerization of the core protein, an essential step in the formation of the virus particle. We developed a novel quantitative assay for monitoring this protein–protein interaction, with the goal of identifying inhibitors of core dimerization that might block HCV production in infected Huh-7.5 hepatoma cells. Two core-derived, 18-residue peptides were found that inhibited the dimerization of a fragment of core comprising residues 1–106 (core106) by 68 and 63 %, respectively. A third, related 15-residue peptide displayed 50 % inhibition, with an IC50 of 21.9 μM. This peptide was shown, by fluorescence polarization, to bind directly to core106 with a K d of 1.9 μM and was displaced by the unlabelled peptide with an IC50 of 18.7 μM. When measured by surface plasmon resonance, the same peptide bound core169 with a K d of 7.2 μM. When added to HCV-infected cells, each of the three peptides blocked release, but not replication, of infectious virus. When measured by real-time RT-PCR, the RNA levels were reduced by 7-fold. The 15-residue peptide had no effect on HIV propagation. Such inhibitors may constitute useful tools to investigate the role of core dimerization in the virus cycle., language=, type=