| Literature DB >> 26546752 |
Corina Hutterer1, Ina Niemann1, Jens Milbradt1, Tony Fröhlich2, Christoph Reiter2, Onat Kadioglu3, Hanife Bahsi1, Isabel Zeitträger1, Sabrina Wagner1, Jürgen Einsiedel4, Peter Gmeiner4, Nico Vogel5, Sebastian Wandinger6, Klaus Godl6, Thomas Stamminger1, Thomas Efferth3, Svetlana B Tsogoeva2, Manfred Marschall7.
Abstract
Infection with human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a serious medical problem, particularly in immunocompromised individuals and neonates. The success of standard antiviral therapy is hampered by low drug compatibility and induction of viral resistance. A novel strategy is based on the exploitation of cell-directed signaling inhibitors. The broad antiinfective drug artesunate (ART) offers additional therapeutic options such as oral bioavailability and low levels of toxic side-effects. Here, novel ART-derived compounds including dimers and trimers were synthesized showing further improvements over the parental drug. Antiviral activity and mechanistic aspects were determined leading to the following statements: (i) ART exerts antiviral activity towards human and animal herpesviruses, (ii) no induction of ART-resistant HCMV mutants occurred in vitro, (iii) chemically modified derivatives of ART showed strongly enhanced anti-HCMV efficacy, (iv) NF-κB reporter constructs, upregulated during HCMV replication, could be partially blocked by ART treatment, (v) ART activity analyzed in stable reporter cell clones indicated an inhibition of stimulated NF-κB but not CREB pathway, (vi) solid-phase immobilized ART was able to bind to NF-κB RelA/p65, and (vii) peptides within NF-κB RelA/p65 represent candidates of ART binding as analyzed by in silico docking and mass spectrometry. These novel findings open new prospects for the future medical use of ART and ART-related drug candidates.Entities:
Keywords: Artesunate and chemical derivatives; Binding of artesunate to NF-κB RelA/p65; Broad antiviral activity; Human cytomegalovirus; Increase of antiviral efficacy; Interference with NF-κB signaling pathways
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26546752 DOI: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2015.10.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antiviral Res ISSN: 0166-3542 Impact factor: 5.970