| Literature DB >> 25157370 |
Carolina De La Guardia1, Ricardo Lleonart2.
Abstract
Dengue fever, a reemerging disease, is putting nearly 2.5 billion people at risk worldwide. The number of infections and the geographic extension of dengue fever infection have increased in the past decade. The disease is caused by the dengue virus, a flavivirus that uses mosquitos Aedes sp. as vectors. The disease has several clinical manifestations, from the mild cold-like illness to the more serious hemorrhagic dengue fever and dengue shock syndrome. Currently, there is no approved drug for the treatment of dengue disease or an effective vaccine to fight the virus. Therefore, the search for antivirals against dengue virus is an active field of research. As new possible receptors and biological pathways of the virus biology are discovered, new strategies are being undertaken to identify possible antiviral molecules. Several groups of researchers have targeted the initial step in the infection as a potential approach to interfere with the virus. The viral entry process is mediated by viral proteins and cellular receptor molecules that end up in the endocytosis of the virion, the fusion of both membranes, and the release of viral RNA in the cytoplasm. This review provides an overview of the targets and progress that has been made in the quest for dengue virus entry inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25157370 PMCID: PMC4135166 DOI: 10.1155/2014/825039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Schematic representation of the dengue virus entry process and possible antiviral targets. The dengue virus makes use of cellular membrane receptors and attachment factors to find its way to the cytoplasm. First, the mature virion gets attached to a cellular membrane receptor (a). It is not clear whether single interactions or sequential usage of several molecules is required to trigger the endocytic, clathrin-dependent pathway (b). The endocytic vesicle becomes a late endosome (c), where acidification triggers conformational changes on the E protein dimers to become fusogenic trimers. Finally, pores are formed and the genome of the virus is released into the cytoplasm (d). Possible antiviral targets are shown with examples of compounds inhibiting the step.
Inhibitors of dengue virus entry.
| Compound | Remarks | Cell line | Dengue virus serotype | IC50/EC50 # | Reference |
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| 1OAN1 | Fusion inhibitor, peptide based on E protein domain II hinge | LLCMK2 | DENV-2 | IC50: 7 ± 1 | [ |
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| DN57opt | Fusion inhibitor, peptide based on E glycoprotein DI/DII beta sheet connection | LLCMK2 | DENV-2 | IC50: 8 ± 1 | [ |
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| DN59 | Fusion inhibitor, E glycoprotein stem and E trimer binder, peptide based on stem sequence | LLCMK2 | DENV-2 | IC50: 2–5 | [ |
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| Compound 6 | Fusion inhibitor, E glycoprotein hydrophobic pocket binder | A549/BHK21 | All | EC50: 0.068–0.49 | [ |
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| Rolitetracycline | Fusion inhibitors, tetracycline derivative, and E glycoprotein hydrophobic pocket binder | BHK21 | DENV-2 | IC50: 67 | [ |
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| Doxycycline | Fusion inhibitors, tetracycline derivative, and E glycoprotein hydrophobic pocket binder | BHK21 | DENV-2 | IC50: 55 | [ |
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| NITD448 | Fusion inhibitor, E glycoprotein hydrophobic pocket binder | BHK21 | DENV-2 | EC50: 9.8 | [ |
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| A5 | E glycoprotein hydrophobic pocket binder | Vero | DENV-2 | IC50: 1.2 | [ |
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| 1662G07 and derivatives | Fusion inhibitor, E glycoprotein stem, and E trimer binders | BHK21 | DENV-2 | IC50: 8 | [ |
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| SA-17 | Derivative of doxorubicin, possible E glycoprotein hydrophobic pocket binder | Vero/BHK21 | DENV-1 | EC50: 12 | [ |
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| LCTA-949 | Analogue of the antibiotic teicoplanin, entry inhibitor | Vero | DENV-2 | EC50: 6.9 | [ |
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| ST-148 | Inhibitor of capsid protein, effective in animal model | Vero | All | EC50: 0.016–2.8 | [ |
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| E 419-447 peptides | Stem derived sequence, trimer binder | BHK | DENV-2 | IC90: 0.1–6 | [ |
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| E 380-389 peptides | Domain III derived sequence, attachment inhibitor | LLCMK2 | DENV-2 | IC50: 35 | [ |
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| P02 | Binds to DENV hydrophobic pocket | BHK | YFV-IRES-Luc | IC50: 13 ± 3 | [ |
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| HHA, GNA, and UDA | Carbohydrate binding agent | Raji/DC-SIGN+ | All | EC50: 4.6; 3.8; 0.29 nM5 | [ |
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| Pradimicin-S | Carbohydrate binding agent | Dendritic cells | DENV-2 | EC50: 11 | [ |
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| PI-88, suramin, and pentosan polysulfate | Heparan mimetic | BHK | DENV-2 | EC50: 200 | [ |
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| Fucoidan | Heparan mimetic | BHK21 | DENV-2 | IC50: 4.7 | [ |
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| Sulfated galactomannan | Heparan mimetic | C6/36 | DENV-1 | EC50: 200 mg/L10∗ | [ |
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| DL-galactan | Heparan mimetic | Vero | DENV-2 | IC50: 0.9–1 | [ |
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| Iota-carrageenan | Heparan mimetic | Vero | DENV-2 | EC50: 0.4 | [ |
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| Zosteric acid, CF-238 | Heparan mimetic | LLCMK2 | All | IC50: 14–47 | [ |
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| Curdlan sulfate | Heparan mimetic | LLCMK2 | DENV-2 | EC50: 7 | [ |
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| Sulfated galactan, sulfated xylomannan | Heparan mimetic | Vero | All | IC50: 0.12–20 | [ |
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| Sulfated K5 polysaccharide | Heparan mimetic | HMEC-1 | DENV-2 | EC50: 111 nM9 | [ |
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| Chebulagic acid, punicalagin | Hydrolysable tannins | Vero | DENV-2 | EC50: 13.1 and 7.8 | [ |
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| Chondroitin sulfate E | Heparan mimetic | BHK21 | All | EC50: 0.3 | [ |
#IC50/EC50: in antiviral assays, half maximal effective concentration (EC50) refers to the concentration of compound causing 50% reduction of virus replication in cell based assays. Half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) is used when virus inhibition is estimated from in vitro inhibition assays, such as the inhibition of a viral enzyme. Sometimes both EC50 and IC50 values are used loosely to describe the same antiviral activity. In this review, we are following the original nomenclature used by each cited paper.
1Viral plaque reduction assay.
2Plaque formation assay.
3Focus forming assay.
4Virus induced CPEs.
5RNA quantitation.
6Cell viability.
7Viral EGFP (enhanced green fluorescent protein) expression.
8Reduction of luciferase activity.
9Flow cytometry.
10Immunofluorescens.
∗Tested in vivo in animal model.