| Literature DB >> 31305906 |
Scott A Read1,2, Stephanie Obeid3, Chantelle Ahlenstiel3, Golo Ahlenstiel1,2.
Abstract
Zinc is an essential trace element that is crucial for growth, development, and the maintenance of immune function. Its influence reaches all organs and cell types, representing an integral component of approximately 10% of the human proteome, and encompassing hundreds of key enzymes and transcription factors. Zinc deficiency is strikingly common, affecting up to a quarter of the population in developing countries, but also affecting distinct populations in the developed world as a result of lifestyle, age, and disease-mediated factors. Consequently, zinc status is a critical factor that can influence antiviral immunity, particularly as zinc-deficient populations are often most at risk of acquiring viral infections such as HIV or hepatitis C virus. This review summarizes current basic science and clinical evidence examining zinc as a direct antiviral, as well as a stimulant of antiviral immunity. An abundance of evidence has accumulated over the past 50 y to demonstrate the antiviral activity of zinc against a variety of viruses, and via numerous mechanisms. The therapeutic use of zinc for viral infections such as herpes simplex virus and the common cold has stemmed from these findings; however, there remains much to be learned regarding the antiviral mechanisms and clinical benefit of zinc supplementation as a preventative and therapeutic treatment for viral infections.Entities:
Keywords: antiviral; immunity; metallothionein; virus; zinc; zinc deficiency; zinc supplementation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31305906 PMCID: PMC6628855 DOI: 10.1093/advances/nmz013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Nutr ISSN: 2161-8313 Impact factor: 8.701
In vitro studies assessing the antiviral efficacy of zinc[1]
| Virus | Antiviral effect | Zinc | Effective dose | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronavirus | Inhibition of RdRp template binding and elongation | PT + Zn(OAc)2 | 2–320 μM PT + 2–500 μM Zn | ( |
| Encephalomyocarditis virus | Inhibition of viral polyprotein cleavage | ZnCl2 | 0.4–1.5 mM | ( |
| Inhibition of viral polyprotein cleavage | ZnCl2 | 0.1–1 mM | ( | |
| Inhibition of viral polyprotein tertiary structure | PT, HK | 5–20 μM PT, 60–125 μM HK | ( | |
| Inhibition of viral polyprotein tertiary structure | PDTC | 15–125 μM PDTC | ( | |
| Foot and mouth disease virus | Inhibition of viral polyprotein cleavage | ZnCl2, Zn(OAc)2 | 0.1–2 mM | ( |
| Inhibition of viral RNA and procapsid synthesis | ZnCl2 | 10–150 μM | ( | |
| Hepatitis C virus | Inhibition of RNA polymerase | ZnCl2 | 60–300 μM | ( |
| Inhibition of viral replication | ZnCl2, ZnSO4 | 50–150 μM | ( | |
| Metallothionein-dependent inhibition of viral replication | ZnSO4 | 50 μM | ( | |
| Herpes simplex virus | Viral protein synthesis | ZnSO4 | N/A | ( |
| Inhibition of viral DNA polymerase | Zn(OAc)2 | 0.1–2 mM | ( | |
| Free virus inactivation | ZnSO4 | 0.1–6 mM | ( | |
| Free virus inactivation | Zn(Glu)2, Zn(Lac)2 | 1–50 mM | ( | |
| Inhibition of protein ubiquitination and NF-κB activity | PT | 1.2–18.9 mM | ( | |
| Human immunodeficiency virus | HIV protease inhibition | Not listed | 0.2–2 mM | ( |
| Inhibition of viral transcription and particle production | ZnCl2 | 70–700 μM | ( | |
| Inhibition of reverse transcriptase | ZnCl2 | 25–800 μM | ( | |
| Human papilloma virus | Stimulates proviral transcription factor activity, reversed by EVER2 | N/A | N/A | ( |
| Inhibition of viral protein E6 and E7 synthesis stimulating apoptosis | CIZAR | 500–750 μM | ( | |
| Respiratory syncytial virus | Reduction in viral titer and plaque count | ZnCl2, Zn(OAc)2, Zn(Lac)2 | 0.01–10 mM | ( |
| Rhinovirus | Inhibition of viral polyprotein cleavage | ZnCl2 | 100–800 μM | ( |
| Inhibition of viral polyprotein cleavage | ZnCl2 | 0.1–1.2 mM | ( | |
| Inhibition of viral polymerase | not listed | >0.6 μM | ( | |
| Inhibition of viral polyprotein processing | PT, HK | 5–20 μM PT, 60–125 μM HK | ( | |
| Inhibition of viral polyprotein processing | PDTC | 15–125 μM PDTC | ( | |
| Semliki Forest virus | Inhibition of endosomal membrane fusion | ZnCl2 | 25–100 μM | ( |
| Inhibition of endosomal membrane fusion | ZnCl2 | 2 mM | ( | |
| Sindbis virus | Inhibition of viral particle production and polyprotein cleavage | ZnCl2 | 0.1–1.8 mM | ( |
| Transmissible gastroenteritis virus | Inhibition of viral RNA and protein synthesis | ZnCl2, ZnSO4 | 10–200 μM | ( |
| Vaccinia virus | Inhibition of RNA synthesis and viral yield | ZnSO4 | 100–300 μM | ( |
| Inhibition of viral particle production and polyprotein cleavage | ZnCl2 | 50–400 μM | ( | |
| Inhibition of viral topoisomerase | Not listed | 2.5 mM | ( | |
| Varicella-zoster virus | Free virus inactivation | Zn(Pic)2, Zn(Asp)2 | 10 μM | ( |
1CIZAR, zinc citrate compound; HK, hinokitiol; N/A, not applicable; PDTC, pyrrolidine-dithiocarbamate; PT, pyrithione; RdRp, RNA-dependent RNA polymerate; Zn(Asp)2, zinc aspartate; ZnCl2, zinc chloride; Zn(Glu)2, zinc gluconate; Zn(Lac)2, zinc lactate; Zn(OAc)2, zinc acetate; Zn(Pic)2, zinc picolinate; ZnSO4, zinc sulfate.
Human clinical studies using zinc as an antiviral therapy [1]
| Viral infection/condition | Antiviral/therapeutic effect | Effective dose | Treatment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Torque teno virus | Reduced viral load following stem cell transplant | 600 mg ZnSO4/d | Oral | ( |
| Herpes simplex | Reduced duration and severity of outbreak | ZnO/glycine cream (0.3% ionic Zn) | Topical | ( |
| Reduction in outbreak recurrence | 0.025% ZnSO4 solution | Topical | ( | |
| Reduction in outbreak recurrence | 1–4% ZnSO4 solution | Topical | ( | |
| Experimental rhinovirus | Reduced duration of illness with Zn(Glu)2 only | Zn(Glu)2 (13.3 mg) or Zn(OAc)2 (5/11.5 mg) lozenges, every 2–3 h/d | Lozenge | ( |
| Common cold | Reduced symptom severity, frequency, and duration | ZGG lozenges containing 23 mg Zn, every 2 h/d | Lozenge | ( |
| Reduced symptom severity, frequency, and duration | ZGG lozenges containing 24 mg Zn, every 2–3 h/d (Max 8) | Lozenge | ( | |
| Reduced duration of symptoms | ZGG lozenges containing 13 mg Zn, every 2 h/d | Lozenge | ( | |
| Reduced symptom severity and duration | Zn(OAc)2 lozenges each containing 9 mg Zn, every 2 h/d | Lozenge | ( | |
| Reduced symptom severity and duration | Zn(OAc)2 lozenges each containing 13 mg Zn, every 2–3 h/d | Lozenge | ( | |
| No effect on duration or severity | Zn(Glu)2 (13.3 mg) or Zn(OAc)2 (5/11.5 mg) lozenges, every 2–3 h/d | Lozenge | ( | |
| Reduced symptom severity and duration | Zn(OAc)2 lozenges each containing 13 mg Zn, every 2–3 h/d | Lozenge | ( | |
| Viral warts | Improved clearance of warts after 1–2 mo | 10 mg/ kg ZnSO4 to a maximum dose of 600 mg/d | Oral | ( |
| Clearance of warts based on concentration of zinc used | 3 × 5 or 10% ZnSO4/d | Topical | ( | |
| Improved clearance of warts after 1–2 mo | 10 mg/ kg ZnSO4 to a maximum dose of 600 mg/d | Oral | ( | |
| No benefit | 10 mg/ kg ZnSO4/d | Oral | ( | |
| Resolution of 88% of lesions after 6 wk/3 sessions | Up to 3 intralesional injections with 2% ZnSO4 | Injection | ( | |
| Laryngeal papillomatosis | Resolution of papillomatosis (2 case studies) | 10 mg/ kg ZnSO4/d | Oral | ( |
| HIV | Reduced infection, increased CD4 T cell count | 200 mg/d ZnSO4/d | Oral | ( |
| Increased CD4 T cell count | 45 mg Zn(Glu)2 every 8 h for 15 d, then 15 mg for 15 d | Oral | ( | |
| Reduced incidence of diarrhea | 10 mg elemental zinc as ZnSO4/d | Oral | ( | |
| No benefit | 25 mg/d ZnSO4/d | Oral | ( | |
| Chronic hepatitis C virus | Enhanced response to IFN treatment | 2 × 75 mg polaprezinc/d | Oral | ( |
| No benefit to IFN treatment response | 5 × 78 mg Zn(Glu)2/d | Oral | ( | |
| Reduced serum AST, ALT, and ferritin | 3 × 75 mg polaprezinc/d | Oral | ( | |
| Reduced serum ALT and Th2 cells (%) | 2 × 75 mg polaprezinc/d | Oral | ( | |
| Reduced incidence of HCC (albumin-dependent) | 2 × 150 mg polaprezinc/d | Oral | ( |
1ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; ZGG, zinc gluconate/glycine; Zn(Glu)2, zinc gluconate; ZnO, zinc oxide; Zn(OAc)2, zinc acetate; ZnSO4, zinc sulfate.
FIGURE 1The diverse stages of viral replication cycles that are inhibited by zinc. In vitro studies have demonstrated a number of mechanisms by which zinc interferes with the viral replication cycle. These include free virus inactivation (1), inhibition of viral uncoating (2), viral genome transcription (3), and viral protein translation and polyprotein processing (4). No studies to date, however, have demonstrated zinc-mediated inhibition of virus assembly and/or particle release. CV, coronavirus; DdDp, DNA-dependent DNA polymerase; EMCV, encephalomyocarditis virus; FMDV, foot and mouth disease virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; HPV, human papilloma virus; HRV, human rhinovirus; HSV, herpes simplex virus; PV, polio virus; RdRp, RNA-dependent RNA polymerase; RT, reverse transcriptase; SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus; SFV, Semliki Forest virus; SV, sindbis virus; VZV, varicella-zoster virus; Zn, zinc.