| Literature DB >> 28389141 |
Minhua Peng1, Satoru Watanabe2, Kitti Wing Ki Chan2, Qiuyan He3, Ya Zhao4, Zhongde Zhang5, Xiaoping Lai3, Dahai Luo6, Subhash G Vasudevan7, Geng Li8.
Abstract
In many countries afflicted with dengue fever, traditional medicines are widely used as panaceas for illness, and here we describe the systematic evaluation of a widely known natural product, luteolin, originating from the "heat clearing" class of herbs. We show that luteolin inhibits the replication of all four serotypes of dengue virus, but the selectivity of the inhibition was weak. In addition, ADE-mediated dengue virus infection of human cell lines and primary PBMCs was inhibited. In a time-of-drug-addition study, luteolin was found to reduce infectious virus particle formation, but not viral RNA synthesis, in Huh-7 cells. During the virus life cycle, the host protease furin cleaves the pr moiety from prM protein of immature virus particles in the trans-Golgi network to produce mature virions. Analysis of virus particles from luteolin-treated cells revealed that prM was not cleaved efficiently. Biochemical interrogation of human furin showed that luteolin inhibited the enzyme activity in an uncompetitive manner, with Ki value of 58.6 μM, suggesting that treatment may restrict the virion maturation process. Luteolin also exhibited in vivo antiviral activity in mice infected with DENV, causing reduced viremia. Given the mode of action of luteolin and its widespread source, it is possible that it can be tested in combination with other dengue virus inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: Antiviral therapy; Dengue virus; Furin; Luteolin; Traditional Chinese medicine; Virus maturation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28389141 DOI: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2017.03.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antiviral Res ISSN: 0166-3542 Impact factor: 5.970