https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sy-5609.html Kasugamycin, a well-known aminoglycoside antibiotic, has been used widely in agriculture and medicine to combat microbial pathogens by binding the ribosome to inhibit translation. Here, kasugamycin was discovered to be a competitive inhibitor of glycoside hydrolase family 18 (GH18) chitinases from three different organisms (bacterium, insect and human). Results from tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy and molecular docking revealed that kasugamycin binds to the substrate-binding clefts in a similar mode as the substrate. An electrostatic interaction between the amino group of kasugamycin and the carboxyl group of a conserved aspartate in GH18 chitinase (one of the catalytic triad residues) was found to be vital for the inhibitory activity. This paper not only reports new molecular targets of kasugamycin, but also expands our thinking about GH inhibitor design by using a scaffold unrelated to the substrate.The novel coronavirus originated in December 2019 in Hubei, China. This contagious disease named as COVID-19 resulted in a massive expansion within 6 months by spreading to more than 213 countries. Despite the availability of antiviral drugs for the treatment of various viral infections, it was concluded by the WHO that there is no medicine to treat novel CoV, SARS-CoV-2. It has been confirmed that SARS-COV-2 is the most highly virulent human coronavirus and occupies the third position following SARS and MERS with the highest mortality rate. The genetic assembly of SARS-CoV-2 is segmented into structural and non-structural proteins, of which two-thirds of the viral genome encodes non-structural proteins and the remaining genome encodes structural proteins. The most predominant structural proteins that make up SARS-CoV-2 include spike surface glycoproteins (S), membrane proteins (M), envelope proteins (E), and nucleocapsid proteins (N). This review will focus on one of the four major structural proteins in the CoV a