| Literature DB >> 30042762 |
Tsz-Fung Yip1, Aisha Sami Mohammed Selim1, Ida Lian2, Suki Man-Yan Lee1.
Abstract
Influenza is a major acute respiratory infection that causes mortality and morbidity worldwide. Two classes of conventional antivirals, M2 ion channel blockers and neuraminidase inhibitors, are mainstays in managing influenza disease to lessen symptoms while minimizing hospitalization and death in patients with severe influenza. However, the development of viral resistance to both drug classes has become a major public health concern. Vaccines are prophylaxis mainstays but are limited in efficacy due to the difficulty in matching predicted dominant viral strains to circulating strains. As such, other potential interventions are being explored. Since viruses rely on host cellular functions to replicate, recent therapeutic developments focus on targeting host factors involved in virus replication. Besides controlling virus replication, potential targets for drug development include controlling virus-induced host immune responses such as the recently suggested involvement of innate lymphoid cells and NADPH oxidases in influenza virus pathogenesis and immune cell metabolism. In this review, we will discuss the advancements in novel host-based interventions for treating influenza disease.Entities:
Keywords: cytokines; host factors; immunomodulation; influenza; metabolism
Year: 2018 PMID: 30042762 PMCID: PMC6048202 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Advancements on targeting host factors for antivirals.
| Cellular target | New potential therapeutic approach | Suggested function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serine proteases | Camostat | Inhibits HA0 cleavage | Yamaya et al. ( |
| V-ATPase | Diphyllin | Inhibits endosomal acidification | Chen et al. ( |
| Acid phosphatase 2 | siRNA | Indirectly disrupts cholesterol homeostasis | Lee et al. ( |
| Importins | Ivermectin | Inhibits nuclear import of viral ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) complex | Gotz et al. ( |
| Cdc2-like kinase 1 | Clypearin | Attenuates M2 splicing | Zu et al. ( |
| RNA polymerase II | Cyclosporine A | Inhibits viral mRNA export | Ma et al. ( |
| Nuclear RNA export factor 1 | PD1 | Inhibits viral RNA export | Morita et al. ( |
| Eukaryotic initiation factor-4A | a. Silvestrol | Inhibits mRNA translation | Slaine et al. ( |
| XPO1 | a. Verdinexor | Inhibit vRNP complex nuclear export | a. Perwitasari et al. ( |
| CypA | Cyclosporine A | Promotes M1 degradation | Liu et al. ( |
| CD151 | siRNA | Inhibits vRNP complex nuclear export | Qiao Y. et al. ( |
| MEK | CI-1040 | Inhibits MEK to suppress phosphorylation of myosin light chain leading to nuclear retention of vRNP complex | Haasbach et al. ( |
| Formyl peptide receptor 2 (FPR2) | WRW4 | Inhibits activation of Raf/MEK/ERK by the ligation of AnxA1 to FPR2 | Courtin et al. ( |
| KIF13A | To be determined | Blocks vRNP apical transport | Ramos-Nascimento et al. ( |
| Histone deacetylase 6 | To be determined | Regulates microtubule stability | Husain et al. ( |
| AnxA6 | To be determined | Reduces plasma membrane cholesterol level and decreases virion egress or stability | Musiol et al. ( |
| Cholesterol | U18666A | Reduces plasma membrane cholesterol level and decreases virion egress | Musiol et al. ( |
| α2-adrenergic receptors | Clonidine | Reduces intracellular cAMP to impair Influenza A virus HA plasma membrane transport | Matsui et al. ( |
| Cholesterol | a. Gemfibrozil | Reduces progeny virus stability and infectivity | Bajimaya et al. ( |
Figure 1Immune responses of primary influenza A virus (IAV) infection. At the initial stage of infection (left), airway epithelial cells and pneumocytes are major targets for IAV. Various cytokines are secreted by these cells as well as alveolar macrophages to induce inflammation and recruits blood immune cells. Infiltrated neutrophils secrete different antimicrobial products to control viral replication. Besides, CXCL12 is secreted by neutrophils to guide the cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTLs) in the later stage of infection. Infiltrated monocytes will further differentiate into monocyte-derived macrophages and monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MoDC). Constant surveying of the airway and uptake of virus-infected dead cells by DCs lead to their maturation. Upregulation of CCR7 results in a CCL19/CCL21-dependent lymph node homing of DCs. Within the lymph node (middle), MoDCs cross-dress CD8α+ DC. CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells are activated by DCs in the presence of cytokines and undergo clonal expansion. Antigen-primed B-cells mature with the aid from follicular T helper cells and further differentiate into plasmablasts in the germinal center. Differential expression of receptors upon maturation of T- and B-cells prompt them to leave the lymph node, enter the blood-stream and recruited to the lung. In the inflamed lung (right), neutrophils leave a trail of CXCL12 to guide CTLs migration. Measures utilized by CTLs for killing infected cells are depicted in inset. Plasmablasts further terminally differentiate into plasma cells and increase antibody production for IAV neutralization.
New immunomodulatory approaches to treat influenza A virus (IAV) infection.
| Potential target/approach | Possible intervention | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Histones | Anti-histone antibodies | Prevents lung inflammation and damage induced by histones | Ashar et al. ( |
| NETosis | Cl-amidine Tetrahydroisoquinolines (both tested on NETosis, effect on IAV yet to be determined) | Prevents lung injury mediated by NET | Kusunoki et al. ( Martinez et al. ( |
| ILC2 | To be determined | Promotes airway epithelium repair | Califano et al. ( |
| Nox2 | Cholestanol-conjugated gp91ds-TAT Apocynin [also as reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenger] Ebselen (also as ROS scavenger and glutathione peroxidase mimetic) | Inhibits Nox2 activity | To et al. ( Ye et al. ( Oostwoud et al. ( |
| Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) | Etanercept | Prevents TNF-mediated lung injury and edema | Shi et al. ( |
| IL-6 | Administration of IL-6 | Inhibits cell death of neutrophils; limits CD8+ T-cell-induced lung injury | Dienz et al. ( |
| IL-27 | Administration of IL-27 at recovery phase (5–10 days post-infection) | Promotes recovery and improves lung immunopathology | Liu et al. ( |
| Type III IFN | Administration of type III IFN | Controls IAV replication by type III IFN signaling pathways | Davidson et al. ( |
| PGE2 signaling | AH6809 (EP2 antagonist) GW627368X (EP4 antagonist) | Restores type I IFNs induction which are suppressed by PGE2 in macrophages | Coulombe et al. ( |
| TLR4 signaling | TLR4 antagonists (a. Eritoran and b. FP7) | Ameliorates TLR4-mediated lung injury | Shirey et al. ( Perrin-Cocon et al. ( |
| TIRAP antagonism | Peptide 2R9 | Inhibits multiple TLR signaling | Piao et al. ( |
| TLR2 signaling | Anti-TLR2 antibody | Inhibits TLR2 signaling mediated lethality | Shirey et al. ( |
| TLR3 signaling | Polysaccharides isolated from | Down regulates TLR3 expression to inhibit hypercytokinemia | Li et al. ( |
| TLR7 signaling | MENK | Down regulates TLR7 expression and reduces lung pathology | Tian et al. ( |