| Literature DB >> 30666246 |
Kirill Gorshkov1, Sergey A Shiryaev2, Sophie Fertel2, Yi-Wen Lin2, Chun-Teng Huang2, Antonella Pinto2, Chen Farhy2, Alex Y Strongin2, Wei Zheng1, Alexey V Terskikh2.
Abstract
The Zika virus (ZIKV) global epidemic prompted the World Health Organization to declare it a 2016 Public Health Emergency of International Concern. The overwhelming experience over the past several years teaches us that ZIKV and the associated neurological complications represent a long-term world-wide challenge to public health. Although the number of ZIKV cases in the Western Hemisphere has dropped since 2016, the need for basic research and anti-ZIKV drug development remains strong. Re-emerging viruses like ZIKV are an ever-present threat in the 21st century where fast transcontinental travel lends itself to viral epidemics. Here, we first present the origin story for ZIKV and review the rapid progress researchers have made toward understanding of the ZIKV pathology and in the design, re-purposing, and testing-particularly in vivo-drug candidates for ZIKV prophylaxis and therapy ZIKV. Quite remarkably, a short, but intensive, drug-repurposing effort has already resulted in several readily available FDA-approved drugs that are capable of effectively combating the virus in infected adult mouse models and, most importantly, in both preventing maternal-fetal transmission and severe microcephaly in newborns in pregnant mouse models.Entities:
Keywords: ZIKV; drugs; in vivo; maternal transmission; re-purposing
Year: 2019 PMID: 30666246 PMCID: PMC6330993 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.03252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1ZIKV infects multiple tissues in humans. Illustration depicting the tissue and cell types that are targeted by ZIKV. Skin is represented by a cartoon of a fibroblast cell. OBGYN tissues are represented by a cartoon of the villus of the placenta and its different cell layers, embryonic brain tissues depicted by a cartoon of the embryonic brain with neural progenitor cells, testis are depicted by a cartoon drawing of spermatozoa.
Small-molecule inhibitors of ZIKV confirmed in mice.
| Sofosbuvir | 20 mg/kg/day; 50 mg/kg/day | Reduced viremia, doubled the survival time, prevented neuromotor impairment and loss of memory, blocked vertical transmission | Swiss albino, SJL | Ferreira et al., |
| Temoporfin | 1 mg/kg | Reduced viremia, protected against lethal challenge | BALB/C, A129 | Sacramento et al., |
| 7-deaza-2′-C-methyladenosine | 50 mg/kg/day | Delayed virus-induced disease progression, reduced viral RNA load | AG129 | Zmurko et al., |
| BCX4430 | 300mg/kg/day | Significantly improved survival when treatment was initiated during the peak of viremia | AG129 | Julander et al., |
| Ribavirin | 500 mg/kg/day | Moderately reduced viremia, prolonged survival | STAT-1 KO | Kamiyama et al., |
| NITD008 | 50 mg/kg | Protected against lethal challenge, protected against neurological symptoms | A129 | Deng et al., |
| NSC157058 | 30 mg/kg/day | Reduced viral load in the blood | SJL | Shiryaev et al., |
| Novobiocin | 100 mg/kg 1dpi, 13dpi | Higher survival rate (100 vs. 0%), lower mean blood and tissue viral loads, and less severe histopathological changes | BALB/c mice | Yuan et al., |
| Emetine | 2 mg/kg/da | Reduced viral titer in blood plasma of SJL mice, reduced serum viral load in Ifnar1−/−, reduced NS1 protein and ZIKV RNA in serum and liver | SJL, A129 | Yang et al., |
| Cephaeline | 2 mg/kg/day | |||
| Peptide Z2 | 10 mg/kg | Decreased viremia, blocked vertical transmission, protected against lethal challenge | A129, AG6 | Li et al., |
| Chloroquine | 40 mg/kg/day; 50 mg/kg/day | Inhibited autophagy; decreased placental infection; attenuated mortality, blocked vertical transmission | A129, SJL | Cao et al., |
| 25-Hydroxycholesterol | 50 mg/kg | Reduced viremia, enhanced survival, inhibited infection and microcephaly in Fetal mice | A129 | Li et al., |
A129 mice lack the receptor for IFN-α/β (type I interferon), STAT-1 KO have impaired type I interferon singling, AG129 mice lack receptors for IFN-α/β as well as receptors for IFN-γ (type II interferon), Swiss albino, BALB/C and SJL mice are interferon-competent.
Small-molecule inhibitors of ZIKV tested in vitro.
| 6-azauridine | 2.30 ± 0.1 | ZIKVBR; (KX197192.1) | Huh7 | ZIKV ENV protein mAb 4G2 immunofluorescence (IF) | IFNα2A antibody IF | Pascoalino et al., |
| 5-fluorouracil | 14.3 ± 8.6 | |||||
| Palonosetron | 16.3 ± 7.7 | |||||
| Lovastatin | 20.7 ± 8.6 | |||||
| Kitasamycin | 41.7 ± 10.1 | |||||
| Sofosbuvir | 1.37 ± 0.7*; 4.95 ± 0.86∧ | PRVABC59 | Huh7*, JAR∧ | Plaque reduction assay | qRT-PCR from cell culture supernatants, ENV protein mAb 4G2 IF, | Bullard-Feibelman et al., |
| 3.80 ± 0.67*; 2.10 ± 0.4∧ | ZIKVBR | |||||
| 4.60 ± 0.82*; 3.79 ± 0.1∧ | Dakar 41519 | |||||
| ND | ZIKVBR | Human fetal-derived hindbrain and cortex NSC | ENV ZV-64 mAb flow cytometry | |||
| 1.90 ± 0.2*, 1.10 ± 0.2#, 0.41 ± 0.04∧, >50@ | ZIKVBR | BHK-21*, SH-SY5Y#, Huh-7∧, Vero@, hNSC, brain organoids | Plaque reduction assay | Cell viability, caspase assay, ZIKV RdRp | Ferreira et al., | |
| Emetine | 0.0298* | PRVABC59*, MR766∧, FSS13025 | SNB-19*, HEK 293, Vero E6, hNSC | ENV mAB 4G2 IF, NS1 homogenous time-resolved fluorescence | Western blot, Plaque reduction assay, TDA, NS5 Polymerase inhibition, | Yang et al., |
| Cephaeline | 0.0189∧ | |||||
| Brequinar | 0.08*, 0.08∧ | MR766∧, PRVABC59 ∧ | Vero 76 | Cytopathic effect inhibition (CPEi) via CellTiter-Glo | Titer-reduction, real-time PCR and Western blot | Adcock et al., |
| NITD008 | 0.51*, 0.56∧ | |||||
| CID 91632869 | 1.09*, 2.17∧ | |||||
| Saliphenylhalamide | 0.62*, 0.49∧ | NA | ||||
| 6-azauridine | 3.18*, 3.91∧ | titer-reduction, real-time PCR | ||||
| Mevastatin | 3.42*, 5.05∧ | |||||
| Finasteride | 9.85*, 26.58∧ | |||||
| Bromocriptine | 13.04 ± 2.00 | PRVABC59 | Vero | CPEi via MTT, viral titer | Plaque reduction, NS2B-NS3 Protease assay | Chan et al., |
| Bortezomib | ~0.01 | MEX_I_7 | Huh-7 | ENV mAb 4G2 IF | HeLa and JEG3 ENV assay, hNSC with flow cytometry | Barrows et al., |
| NITD008 | ~0.50 | |||||
| MPA | ~0.80 | |||||
| Daptomycin | ~0.80 | |||||
| Ivermectin | ~5.00 | |||||
| Chloroquine | ~12.5–25.0* | MR766*, ZIKVBR* | Vero*, hBMECs, hNPC, mouse neurospheres | ENV mAb 4G2 flow cytometry and IF | Plaque reduction assay, Cell viability, qRT-PCR | Delvecchio et al., |
| Curcumin | 1.90 | HD78788 | HeLa | Plaque reduction assay | Cell viability, qRT-PCR, viral surface binding | Mounce et al., |
| EGCG | 21.4* | ZIKVBR*, MR766 | Vero E6 | Plaque reduction assay | Cell viability | Carneiro et al., |
| GSK126 | ~10.0 | ZIKV (H/PF/2013) | Human foreskin fibroblasts | Plaque forming assay | Pan-Flavivirus MAb E60 | Arbuckle et al., |
| Heparin | ND | MR766, INMI-1 (KU991811) | Human neural progenitor cells, Vero | ENV mAb 4G2 IF, CPEi via adenylate kinase assay | Caspase-3 IF, viral titer, cell viability | Ghezzi et al., |
| Nanchangamycin | 0.1*, 0.4∧, 0.97# | Mex2-81*∧#, MR766 | U2OS*, HMBEC∧, Jeg-3#, EVTs, mouse primary midbrain neuron-glia mixed cultures | ENV mAb 4G2 IF | Cell viability, qRT-PCR, viral titer, TDA, viral uptake, transferrin | Rausch et al., |
| Obatoclax | 0.04 ± 0.01* | FB-GWUH-2016*, MR766, H/PF/2013, MRS_OPY_Martinique_PaRi_2015 | mouse retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells | CPEi via CellTiter-Glo | TDA, drug combinations, qRT-PCR, plaque assays, cytokine profiling, IF, caspase-3/7/1 assays | Kuivanen et al., |
| Saliphenylhalamide | 0.5 ± 0.2* | |||||
| Gemcitabine | 0.01 ± 0.0* | |||||
| Pentagalloylglucose | 4.10 | PRVABC59 | Vero B4 | qRT-PCR on culture supernatant | NA | Behrendt et al., |
| Novobiocin | 42.63*, 62.24∧ | PRVABC59 | Vero*, Huh-7∧ | Fluorescence protease inhibition, | Yuan et al., | |
| Lopinavir-ritonavir | 4.78 ± 0.41 μg/ml*, 3.31 ± 0.36 μg/ml∧ | |||||
| Cn-716 | 0.25 ± 0.02 | ZIKVBR | Crystallized NS2B-NS3pro | X-ray crystallography | CellTiter-Glo cytotoxicity assay for cn-716 | Lei et al., |
| Aprotinin | 0.361 ± 19 | ZIKV | Crystallized NS2B-NS3pro | X-ray crystallography | NA | Chen et al., |
| Mefloquine | 3.60 | ZIKVBR | Vero | qRT-PCR on culture supernatant | Cell viability via XTT assay | Barbosa-Lima et al., |
| Mefloquine analog 3a | 0.80 ± 0.06 | |||||
| Mefloquine analog 4 | 0.80 ± 0.03 | |||||
| Merimepodib | 0.60 ± 0.2* | FSS13025*, MR766 | Huh-7, Vero E6 | qRT-PCR on culture supernatant | Plaque reduction assay, CPEi via CellTiter-Glo | Tong et al., |
| Various polyphenolics such as bis-indole alkaloids flinderole A* and flinderole B*, cassiarin D∧, cimiphenol#, 2′,4,4′-trihydroxy-3,3′-diprenylchalcone@ | ND | Homology modeling of ZIKV proteins | NA | NA | Byler et al., | |
| 6-methylmercaptopurine riboside (6MMPr) | 24.5*, 20.3∧ | PE243 (KX197192.1) | Vero*, SH-SY5Y∧ | qRT-PCR on culture supernatant | ZIKV ENV protein mAb 4G2 flow cytometry and IF, Plaque reduction assay | de Carvalho et al., |
| Nordihydroguaiaretic Acid (NDGA) | 9.10 | ZIKV PA259459 | Vero (CCL-81) | Plaque reduction assay | NA | Merino-Ramos et al., |
| M4N | 5.70 | |||||
| 2′-CMA | 5.26 ± 0.12 | MR766 | Vero (CCL-81) | Plaque reduction assay | Flavivirus-specific antibody IF | Eyer et al., |
| 7-deaza-2′-CMA | 8.92 ± 3.32 | |||||
| 2′-CMC | 10.51 ± 0.02 | |||||
| 2′-CMG | 22.25 ± 0.03 | |||||
| 2′-CMU | 5.45 ± 0.64 | |||||
| PKI 14-22 | 17.8 | IbH 30656 | HUVEC, astrocytes | Plaque reduction assay, | qRT-PCR, Western blot, TDA, RNA polymerase assay | Cheng et al., |
| 22.3 | MR766 | |||||
| 34.1 | H/FP/2013 | |||||
| 19.2 | PRVABC5 | |||||
| GW4869 | ND | MR766, PRVABC59 | Human fetal astrocytes, Vero | qRT-PCR on culture supernatant | ENV mAb 4G2 IF, viral plaque assay, TDA | Huang et al., |
| R848 | Effective down to 0.1* | MR766 | CHME3*, Primary human MDMs | intracellular qRT-PCR | Viperin Western blot | Vanwalscappel et al., |
| CLR01 | 8.20* | MR766* | Vero E6*, HeLa, SW480, HFF, A172, H4, mouse cerebellum primary culture | CPEi via MTT* | ENV mAb 4G2 IF∧#, flow cytometry, TDA, qRT-PCR | Röcker et al., |
| 6.7∧ | FB-GWUH-2016∧ | |||||
| 4.2# | PRVABC59# |
Compounds with high selectivity and potency in each respective study.
TDA, time-of-drug addition assay; IF, immunofluorescence; CPEi, cytopathic effect inhibition assay; RdRP, RNA-dependent RNA polymerase.
Superscript symbols *, ∧, #, @ designate corresponding samples/assays/cells/IC50.
Figure 2Anti-ZIKV drugs targeting the different steps in the viral life cycle. Emricasan targets caspase-3 activity to prevent cell death. Z2 peptide targets ZIKV cell entry. 25-hydroxycholesterol and chloroquine interfere with lipid homeostasis and autophagy to disrupt viral particle release after endocytosis. Temoporfin, nitazoxanide, niclosamide, and viperin block NS2B/NS3 protease activity to prevent viral replication. Sofosbuvir, merimepodib, N-(4-hydrophenyl) retinamide, 7-deaza-2′-C-methyladenosine, NITD008, BCX4430, and ribavarin block ZIKV NS5 polymerase activity to prevent viral replication. Ribavarin and merimepodib block IMPDH, an enzyme involved in de novo synthesis of guanine nucleotides. Niclosamide, EGCG, and cavinafungin block CDKs and prevent viral replication.