| Literature DB >> 30250466 |
Abstract
Influenza viruses (IVs) are a continual threat to global health. The high mutation rate of the IV genome makes this virus incredibly successful, genetic drift allows for annual epidemics which result in thousands of deaths and millions of hospitalizations. Moreover, the emergence of new strains through genetic shift (e.g., swine-origin influenza A) can cause devastating global outbreaks of infection. Neuraminidase inhibitors (NAIs) are currently used to treat IV infection and act directly on viral proteins to halt IV spread. However, effectivity is limited late in infection and drug resistance can develop. New therapies which target highly conserved features of IV such as antibodies to the stem region of hemagglutinin or the IV RNA polymerase inhibitor: Favipiravir are currently in clinical trials. Compared to NAIs, these treatments have a higher tolerance for resistance and a longer therapeutic window and therefore, may prove more effective. However, clinical and experimental evidence has demonstrated that it is not just viral spread, but also the host inflammatory response and damage to the lung epithelium which dictate the outcome of IV infection. Therapeutic regimens for IV infection should therefore also regulate the host inflammatory response and protect epithelial cells from unnecessary cell death. Anti-inflammatory drugs such as etanercept, statins or cyclooxygenase enzyme 2 inhibitors may temper IV induced inflammation, demonstrating the possibility of repurposing these drugs as single or adjunct therapies for IV infection. IV binds to sialic acid receptors on the host cell surface to initiate infection and productive IV replication is primarily restricted to airway epithelial cells. Accordingly, targeting therapies to the epithelium will directly inhibit IV spread while minimizing off target consequences, such as over activation of immune cells. The neuraminidase mimic Fludase cleaves sialic acid receptors from the epithelium to inhibit IV entry to cells. While type III interferons activate an antiviral gene program in epithelial cells with minimal perturbation to the IV specific immune response. This review discusses the above-mentioned candidate anti-IV therapeutics and others at the preclinical and clinical trial stage.Entities:
Keywords: antiviral; immunomodulation; influenza; therapeutics; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30250466 PMCID: PMC6139312 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Summary of key treatments discussed.
| IV | MHAA4549A | Phase II | Antibody to HA stem region, induces cellular cytotoxicity of infected cells | IAV only | Inhibitory | Inhibitory | Not reported | Good |
| MEDI8852 | Phase II | Antibody to HA stem region, induces cellular cytotoxicity of infected cells | IAV only | Inhibitory | Not reported | Not reported | Good | |
| VIS-410 | Phase II | Antibody to HA stem region, induces cellular cytotoxicity of infected cells | Select IAV strains | Inhibitory | Not reported | Not reported | Good | |
| JNJ63623872 | Phase II | Inhibits IV replication by binding PB2 and preventing 7-methyl GTP docking | IAV only | Inhibitory | Not reported | Not reported | Moderate | |
| Favipiravir | Approved/phase II | Inhibits generation of viable IV particles by driving mutations in IV genome | None | Inhibitory | Not reported | Not reported | Good | |
| JJ3297 | Preclinical | Inhibits NS1 activity | None | Inhibitory | Stimulatory | Not reported | Unknown | |
| Immune response | Etanercept | Clinically approved for other | TNF receptor decoy, blocks TNFα signaling | None | Inhibitory | Inhibitory | Not reported | Unknown |
| IFNαβ | Clinically approved for other | Induces expression of antiviral and inflammatory genes in epithelial cells and immune cells | None | Inhibitory | Stimulatory | Increased cell death | Low | |
| AAL-R | Preclinical | Inhibits inflammatory cytokine and chemokine secretion and immune cell recruitment by agonism of S1PRs: 1, 3, 4, and 5 | None | No effect | Inhibitory | Decreased cell death | Low | |
| CYM-5442 | Preclinical | Inhibits inflammatory cytokine and chemokine secretion and immune cell recruitment by agonism of S1PR1 | None | No effect | Inhibitory | Decreased cell death | Moderate | |
| RP-002 | Preclinical | Inhibits inflammatory cytokine and chemokine secretion and immune cell recruitment by agonism of S1PR1 | None | No effect | Inhibitory | Decreased cell death | Moderate | |
| Celecoxib | Clinically approved for other (Phase III for IV) | COX-2 inhibitor, may blunt immunopathology through induction of PGE2 | None | No effect | Inhibitory/no effect | Not reported | Moderate | |
| Statins | Clinically approved for other | Competitive inhibitors for HMG-CoA reductase, blunts inflammation and viral replication in some settings | None | Inhibitory | Inhibitory | Not reported | Moderate | |
| Pioglitazone | Clinically approved for other | PPARγ agonist, decreases recruitment of tipDCs | None | No effect | Inhibitory | Not reported | Moderate | |
| Epithelial cells | Fludase | Phase II | Removes IV entry point into epithelial cells by cleaving sialic acid receptors | None | Inhibitory | Not reported | Not reported | Good |
| IFNλ | Phase II (other) | Induces expression of antiviral and inflammatory genes primarily in epithelial cells | None | Inhibitory | No effect | Decreased cell death | Good | |
| Anti-TRAIL | Preclinical | mAb to TRAIL, blocks interaction between TRAIL and its cognate receptors to inhibit extrinsic apoptosis | None | No effect | No effect | Decreased cell death | Unknown | |
| A-1155463 | Preclinical | Bcl-2 family inhibitor, drives apoptosis of IV infected cells | None | Inhibitory | Not reported | Not reported | Unknown |
Potential therapeutics for human IV infection are summarized. Treatments are separated based on which aspect of IV infection is targeted. Viability of each therapeutic is rated based on data discussed in this review.