| Literature DB >> 31158418 |
Shuvam Mukherjee1, Kanika Ghosh1, Friedrich Hahn2, Christina Wangen2, Hanife Strojan2, Regina Müller2, Namrata Anand1, Imran Ali1, Kaushik Bera1, Bimalendu Ray1, Corina Hutterer2, Manfred Marschall3, Sayani Ray4.
Abstract
The provisioning of compound libraries with a high degree of diversity and attractive pharmacological properties is a limiting step in drug development. This study reports the production of highly bioactive sulfated polysaccharides, originally present in a nonsulfated, dormant state in natural sources, and demonstrates their antiviral activity (human cytomegalovirus EC50 values of 2.34-7.77 μg/mL) at a low degree of cytotoxicity. Furthermore, data strongly suggested the inhibition of virus entry as the main mode of antiviral action. Remarkably, the utilized oleum-DMF reagent was able to generate a range of sulfated polysaccharides from various natural sources, possessing varying saccharide compositions, degrees of sulfation (0.4-1.7) and molecular masses (38-94,000 g/mol). Typically, in a matter of minutes, this reagent not only solubilized polysaccharides but also chemically converted their hydroxyl functionality into sulfates. The most active sulfated polysaccharide (EC50 of 2.62 μg/mL) proved to be a 94,000 g/mol branched glucan with sulfates at C-6/C-3,6/C-2,3,6 positions. In conclusion, the important determinants of such compounds' antiviral activity are: (i) degree of sulfation, (ii) molecular mass and (iii) structural features. Thus, our approach offers a huge prospect for the improvement of natural source-derived libraries based on biologically active polysaccharides with diversified chemical profiles.Entities:
Keywords: Antiviral activities; Functionalization; Natural products; Polysaccharides; Structural features
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31158418 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2019.05.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Macromol ISSN: 0141-8130 Impact factor: 6.953