Zhengqiang (ZQ) Wang, PhD

Professor, Center for Drug Design
Zhengqiang Wang headshot

Contact

Office Address

7-216 Phillips Wangensteen Building
516 Delaware Street SE
Minneapolis, MN 55455
United States

Titles

Professor, Center for Drug Design
Co-Director, Center for Drug Design

Education

PhD, Wayne State University, 2003

MS, Peking University, 1996

BS, Nankai University, 1993

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Biography

Expertise

Organic synthesis, computer-aided inhibitor design, assay development and compound screening, chemical probes design and synthesis, in vitro assays, and ADME profiling.

Research Summary

Research in my group concerns primarily the design and synthesis of small organic molecules to probe / inhibit protein functions. We are particularly interested in protein targets implicated in the replication of various viruses as well as cellular DNA repair pathways. Our efforts are typically aligned with early drug discovery events, including target validation, lead generation, optimization and characterization, ADME / PK and Tox. Currently projects fall into these areas:

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)

Clinical management of HIV / AIDS relies solely on successful Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy (HAART). Antivirals with novel mechanism of action and / or novel resistance profile are key to sustainable HAART. Toward these ends, we are currently exploring two distinct approaches:

  1. Designing capsid-targeting antivirals. The HIV-1 capsid protein (CA) plays critical roles in multiple steps of the viral replication cycle, including uncoating, reverse transcription, nuclear entry, sites of integration, and assembly. These critical functions are regulated through CA interactions and core stability. Small molecules can increase or decrease the core stability by disrupting CA interactions, and hence confer antiviral phenotypes in a unique way. Our current medicinal chemistry focuses on the design and synthesis of novel CA-targeting small molecules with distinct resistance profiles from lenacapavir.
  2. Targeting HIV reverse transcriptase associated RNase H. As a sub-domain of reverse transcriptase (RT), RNase H remains the only HIV encoded enzymatic function yet to be targeted by any known antiviral drugs (Figure 1). While many compounds have been reported to inhibit HIV RNase H biochemically, few were found to inhibit HIV in cell culture and none is known to confer antiviral phenotype via RNase H inhibition. We are conducting major medicinal chemistry efforts aligned toward validating RNase H as an antiviral target against HIV.

Orthopoxviruses (OPXVs)  

The 2022 global mpox outbreak highlight the pandemic potential of emerging and re-emerging OPXVs and the threat they pose on global human health. The FDA has approved two drugs for smallpox—tecovirimat and brincidofovir—but against mpox tecovirimat failed to produce clinical efficacy, and efficacy in humans remains unknown for brincidofovir. Toward developing effective OPXV antivirals, particularly novel compounds with unique antiviral mechanisms, we have been using both a phenotypic-based approach with three potent and chemically distinct lead series; and a target-based approach by targeting the viral resolvase required for concatemer resolution.  

Human Cytomegalovirus (HCMV) UL89 

HCMV infection poses a major health threat to immunocompromised individuals such as newborns, HIV and transplant patients. Current drugs all target viral polymerase and suffer from poor efficacy, toxicity and resistance. Hence, there is a pressing need for antivirals with a novel mechanism of action. We are currently targeting the C-terminal endonuclease function of the viral protein UL89 which is important for proper genomic DNA packaging and virus assembly. 

Tyrosyl DNA phosphodiesterase II (TDP2)  

TDP2 is a newly discovered DNA repair enzyme and the only known human enzyme capable of cleaving 5’-tyrosyl DNA adducts. It is implicated in the chemotherapeutic resistance of topoisomerase 2 (Top2) poisons, as well as the genome replication of hepadnaviruses (e.g. HBV) and picornaviruses. Inhibiting TDP2 provides pathways toward Top2 poison sensitization in cancer therapy and host-targeting antivirals. We are currently pursuing medicinal chemistry for potent and selective TDP2 inhibitors targeting its active site. 

Publications

Grants and Patents

Research Funding Grants

ACTIVE

  1. 1R01AI183580 NIH/NIAID (Wang / Yang) 06/14/2024-05/30/2029
    Development of novel antivirals against monkeypox virus
    The goal of this grant is to develop three potent and structurally distinct antiviral hits against orthopoxviruses into preclinical drug candidates.
  2. R01AI167356 NIH/NIAID (Sarafianos / Wang) 7/1/2022-6/30/2027
    “Discovery of SARS-CoV-2 antivirals using a replicon assay”
    The goals of this grant are to identify SARS-CoV-2 antiviral hits via screening chemical libraries using replicon plasmid systems and SARS-CoV-2 replicon-expressing cell lines, and to optimize these hits via iterative SAR and ADME property profiling.
  3. R01 AI120860 NIH/NIAID (Sarafianos / Wang) 07/01/2021-06/30/2026
    “Development of HIV capsid-targeting antivirals that affect immune response by modulating capsid stability and have improved resistance profiles”.
    The goal of this grant is to advance the understanding of the structural basis of HIV capsid (CA) core stability and to discover CA-targeting antivirals with improved pharmacological properties, high potency, and improved resistance profiles.
  4. R01AI136982 NIH/NIAID (Geraghty / Wang) 01/25/2019-01/24/2024
    “Discovery and development of novel anti-HCMV agents targeting the UL89 terminase protein”.
    The goal of this grant is to develop structurally novel direct-acting antivirals against HCMV targeting pUL89, a viral ATPase/endonuclease terminase complex component critically involved in viral genome packaging and virus assembly.

COMPLETED

  1. R01AI121315 NIH/NIAID (Sarafianos / Wang) 06/14/2016-06/13/2022
    “Taking aim at HBV eradication using novel NRTIs and capsid effectors”
    The goal of this grant is to discover and characterize potent capsid effectors and study their antiviral effect in combination with NRTIs.
  2. R01AI120860 NIH/NIAID (Sarafianos / Wang) 06/15/2015-06/14/2021
    “Structural studies of HIV Capsid with host factors and Capsid-targeting antivirals”.
    The goal of this grant is to characterize the structural determinants of HIV capsid (CA) core stability, to unravel structural interactions of CA with host factors and to discover CA-targeting antivirals.
  3. R01AI100890 NIH/NIAID (Sarafianos / Wang) 07/01/2012-06/30/2018
    “Novel Antivirals Targeting the RNase H Activity of HIV Reverse Transcriptase”.
    The goal of this grant is to identify and optimize selective inhibitors of HIV RNase H and study detailed biochemistry of different modes of RNase H activities as well as inhibitor binding sites, and eventually validate RNase H as an antiviral target for HIV chemotherapy. Currently on no cost extension.
  4. Research Development and Seed Grant (Wang) 07/01/2012-06/30/2014
    Center for Drug Design, University of Minnesota
    “3’ and 4’-Triazoyl Thymidines as Chemotypes for Antiviral Discovery”
    The goal of this project was to validate and enrich 3’ and 4’-triazoyl thymidine scaffolds as viable chemotypes for antiviral discovery
  5. FRD#23. Faculty Research Development Grant (Aihara / Wang) 07/01/2014-06/30/2016
    Academic Health Center, University of Minnesota
    “Structure-Based Discovery of Tyrosyl DNA Phosphodiesterase 2 (TDP2) Inhibitors”
    The goal of this grant is to discover novel hTdp2 inhibitors and obtain their co-crystal structures with hTDP2 to allow understanding on inhibitory mechanism and provide a platform for TDP2 drug discovery efforts.

Patents

  • Wang, Z.; Sarafianos, S. G. “Novel antivirals targeting HIV-1 capsid resistant to Lenacapavir”, Provisional Application No.: 63/941,318, filed on 12/15/2025
  • Wang, Z.; Offei, S.; Yang, Z. “Poxvirus antvirals targeting viral resolvases” Provisional Application No.: 63/939,809, filed on 12/12/2025.
  • Wang, Z.; Sarafianos, S. G. “Antiviral Compounds”, US 11,850,247B2, issued on 12/26/2023.
  • Wang, Z.; Kankanala, J.; Pommier, Y. “Compounds for Cancer Chemotherapeutic Sensitization” U. S. Patent No. 10617706, issued 04/124/2020
  • Sarafianos, S. G.; Huber, A. D.; Wang, Z.; Tang, J. “Inhibitors of Hepatitis B Virus Targeting Capsid Assembly” US 62/564,865, 09/27/2017
  • Wang, Z. “3-Hydroxypyridine-2,4-dione-5-carboxamides as potent inhibitors of HIV” US 10,117,871 B2, issued on 11/06/2018
  • Marchand, C.; Pommier, Y.; Wang, Z.; Sirivolu, V. R. “Thioxothiazolidinone Derivatives Useful as Inhibitors of Tdp1”, WO/2013/055771 (Oct. 10, 2012).
  • Wang, Z.; Geraghty, R. J.; Vince, R.; Tang, J. “N-Hydroxypyrimidine-2,4-diones as Inhibitors of HIV and HCV”, WO2012047993 A2 (Oct. 5, 2010).