Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV), a member of the Flaviviridae family, causes significant public health concerns through congenital Zika syndrome and Guillain-Barré syndrome, yet no effective anti-ZIKV drugs or vaccines are available. To address this critical need, we conducted phenotypic, cytopathic effect-based high-throughput screening followed by medicinal chemistry optimization and discovered novel benzamide anti-ZIKV leads. Current best compounds demonstrated superior potency (EC50 values 40-400 nM, CC50 > 50 µM) compared to NITD-008, the most potent known anti-ZIKV agent. Time-of-addition assays, resistant virus selection studies, and biophysical binding experiments confirmed that NS4B interference constitutes the primary antiviral mechanism. Notably, resistance mutations mapped to the C-terminus of NS4B, distinct from other flavivirus NS4B inhibitors targeting dengue or yellow fever viruses, revealing novel insights into a critical function of the region. These findings establish NS4B as an Achilles' heel for flaviviruses and support the development of pan-flavivirus therapeutics targeting this essential viral protein.