| Literature DB >> 26262613 |
Atsushi Furuta1,2, Masayoshi Tsubuki3, Miduki Endoh4, Tatsuki Miyamoto1,2, Junichi Tanaka5, Kazi Abdus Salam6, Nobuyoshi Akimitsu7, Hidenori Tani8, Atsuya Yamashita9, Kohji Moriishi10, Masamichi Nakakoshi11, Yuji Sekiguchi2, Satoshi Tsuneda12, Naohiro Noda13,14.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an important etiological agent of severe liver diseases, including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The HCV genome encodes nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) helicase, which is a potential anti-HCV drug target because its enzymatic activity is essential for viral replication. Some anthracyclines are known to be NS3 helicase inhibitors and have a hydroxyanthraquinone moiety in their structures; mitoxantrone, a hydroxyanthraquinone analogue, is also known to inhibit NS3 helicase. Therefore, we hypothesized that the hydroxyanthraquinone moiety alone could also inhibit NS3 helicase. Here, we performed a structure-activity relationship study on a series of hydroxyanthraquinones by using a fluorescence-based helicase assay. Hydroxyanthraquinones inhibited NS3 helicase with IC50 values in the micromolar range. The inhibitory activity varied depending on the number and position of the phenolic hydroxyl groups, and among different hydroxyanthraquinones examined, 1,4,5,8-tetrahydroxyanthraquinone strongly inhibited NS3 helicase with an IC50 value of 6 µM. Furthermore, hypericin and sennidin A, which both have two hydroxyanthraquinone-like moieties, were found to exert even stronger inhibition with IC50 values of 3 and 0.8 µM, respectively. These results indicate that the hydroxyanthraquinone moiety can inhibit NS3 helicase and suggest that several key chemical structures are important for the inhibition.Entities:
Keywords: NS3 helicase; fluorescence resonance energy transfer; hepatitis C virus; hydroxyanthraquinone; hypericin; inhibitor; sennidin A
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26262613 PMCID: PMC4581254 DOI: 10.3390/ijms160818439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Structures of hydroxyanthraquinones and their IC50 values for NS3 helicase inhibition. The IC50 values were obtained from inhibition curves (Figure S1). The data in the inhibition curves are presented as mean ± standard deviation (SD) of three replicates using the fluorescence helicase assay. The NS3 helicase activities of samples containing inhibitor were calculated relative to control samples, containing DMSO vehicle instead of inhibitor.
Figure 2Inhibition curves of (A) hypericin and (B) sennidin A generated using the fluorescence helicase assay. The NS3 helicase activities of samples containing inhibitor were calculated relative to control samples containing DMSO vehicle instead of inhibitor. The data are presented as mean ± standard deviation of three replicates.
Effect of hypericin and sennidin A on HCV replication and cytotoxicity.
| Compound | EC50 (µM) | CC50 (µM) | SI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypericin | 3.5 ± 0.2 | 41.1 ± 9.5 | 11.7 |
| Sennidin A | >80 | >80 | n.d. |
EC50, fifty percent effective concentration based on the inhibition of HCV replication; CC50, fifty percent cytotoxicity concentration based on the reduction in cell viability; SI, selectivity index (CC50/EC50); n.d., not determined. The EC50 and CC50 values are presented as mean ± standard deviation of three replicates.
Figure 3Effect of hypericin on NS3 ATPase activity. Activity was demonstrated by autoradiography of an ATPase assay using [γ-32P]ATP. Lane 1 contains the control reaction without NS3; Lanes 2–9 show the ATP hydrolysis reaction with poly(U) RNA at increasing concentrations (0–100 μM) of hypericin.
Figure 4Effect of hypericin on NS3 RNA-binding activity. Activity was assessed by autoradiography of a gel mobility-shift assay using 32P-labeled ssRNA. Lanes 1 and 2 contain control reactions with heat-denatured ssRNA and 300 nM BSA (instead of NS3), respectively; Lanes 3–10 show the RNA-binding reaction with increasing concentrations (0–100 μM) of hypericin.