| Literature DB >> 31422545 |
Hamed Memariani1, Mojtaba Memariani2, Hamideh Moravvej1, Mohammad Shahidi-Dadras1.
Abstract
Despite tremendous advances in the development of anti-viral therapeutics, viral infections remain a chief culprit accounting for ongoing morbidity and mortality worldwide. Natural products, in particular animal venoms, embody a veritable cornucopia of exotic constituents, suggesting an immensurable source of anti-infective drugs. In this context, melittin, the principal constituent in the venom of the European honeybee Apis mellifera, has been demonstrated to exert anti-cancer, anti-inflammatory, anti-diabetic, anti-infective, and adjuvant properties. To our knowledge, there is no review appertaining to effects of melittin against viruses, prompting us to synopsize experimental investigations on its anti-viral activity throughout the past decades. Accumulating evidence indicates that melittin curbs infectivity of a diverse array of viruses including coxsackievirus, enterovirus, influenza A viruses, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), herpes simplex virus (HSV), Junín virus (JV), respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), and tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). However, medication safety, different routes of administrations, and molecular mechanisms behind the anti-viral activity of melittin should be scrutinized in future studies.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-viral activity; Bee; Drug; Melittin; Venom
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31422545 PMCID: PMC7224078 DOI: 10.1007/s10096-019-03674-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis ISSN: 0934-9723 Impact factor: 3.267
In vitro anti-viral effects of melittin
| Family/virus (strain) | Methods | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junín virus (IV4454) | Virucidal assay and viral yield inhibition | Melittin hampered multiplication of Junín virus in Vero cells infected at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.1. | [ |
| Bovine viral diarrhea virus (NADL) | Treatment of cells with melittin (before and after viral infection) | Melittin was failed to reduce viral particles, though addition of apamin potentiated its anti-viral activity. | [ |
| HSV-1 (MP, | Phase-contrast microscopy (evaluating cell fusion and plaque morphology), viral yield inhibition, adsorption and penetration assays | Melittin (0.5 μM) impeded HSV-1-induced cell fusion in glycoprotein K mutants, but not glycoprotein B mutants. It was also effective in inhibiting HSV-1 adsorption and penetration. | [ |
| HSV-1 M (ATCC VR-539) and HSV-2 G (ATCC VR-734) | Virucidal assay | Melittin completely inactivated HSV-1 M and HSV-2 G. | [ |
| HSV-1 (F) and HSV-2 (G) | Virucidal assay and viral yield inhibition | Melittin (0.5–3 μM) inhibited infectivity of both HSV-1 and HSV-2. | [ |
| GFP-fused HSV | Viral yield inhibition and analysis of GFP expression | Compared to untreated groups, melittin treatment (2 μg/mL) led to a 16-fold reduction in viral titers and a pronounced decrease in GFP expression in infected cells. | [ |
| BoHV-1 (Los Angeles) | Treatment of cells with melittin (before and after viral infection) and virucidal kinetics | Melittin (2 μg/mL) exhibited potent anti-viral effects on BoHV-1. Melittin (25 μg/mL) required 2 and 4 h to completely wipe out BoHV-1 at 37 °C and 22 °C, respectively. | [ |
| GFP-fused influenza A (PR8) | Viral yield inhibition, analysis of GFP expression, virus attachment assay, entry assay, and virucidal mechanism | Compared to untreated groups, melittin (2 μg/mL) reduced both viral titers and GFP expression in infected cells (without affecting either virus-cell attachment or virus entrance into cells). | [ |
| EV-71 | Viral yield inhibition, analysis of GFP expression, and real-time polymerase chain reaction | Melittin reduced EV-71 infectivity and cytopathic effects as well as mRNA expression levels of VP1 (4-fold) compared to untreated groups. | [ |
| GFP-fused coxsackievirus (H3) | Viral yield inhibition and analysis of GFP expression | Melittin (2 μg/mL) diminished both GFP expression (1.5-fold) in infected cells and virus titers (5-fold) compared to untreated groups. | [ |
| GFP-fused RSV | Viral yield inhibition and analysis of GFP expression | Melittin (2 μg/mL) markedly reduced not only virus titers but also GFP expression in infected cells compared to untreated groups. | [ |
| GFP-fused VSV | Viral yield inhibition, analysis of GFP expression, and virucidal kinetics | Melittin (2 μg/mL) rapidly (5–30 min) suppressed VSV infectivity, and caused substantial reduction in both virus titer and GFP expression in infected cells compared to untreated groups. | [ |
| VHSV | Immunostaining focus assay | Melittin-loaded liposomes and immunoliposomes inhibited VHSV-infected cell foci formation and reduced the VHSV spread in cell culture. | [ |
| MuLV (ATS-124) | Direct virolysis and electron microscopy | Melittin (50 μg) disintegrated the viral membrane, resulting in complete release of reverse transcriptase after 30 min of incubation at 20 °C. | [ |
| RAV-2 | Direct virolysis (permeabilization of viral envelope) | Melittin made the viral envelope permeable. Compared to NP-40, melittin caused less damage to viral structure, permitting synthesis of full-length cDNA. | [ |
| HIV-1 (SF2) | Direct virolysis (permeabilization of viral envelope) | Melittin (20–100 μg/mL) was exploited to permeabilize HIV-1 envelope. Melittin treatment led to a 30% higher endogenous cDNA yield compared to Triton X-100. | [ |
| HIV-1 (IIIB) | Viral yield inhibition, treatment of HIV-1-infected cells with melittin, and western blot analysis | Melittin at 0.5 and 2.5 μg/mL reduced HIV infectivity in supernatants of KE37/1 T lymphoma cells by ≤ 40% and 100%, respectively. Compared to untreated cells, expression of a 31 kDa protein was reduced in melittin-treated cell extracts. | [ |
| HIV-1 (IIIB) and HIV-1 (RF) | Treatment of infected cells with melittin, quantitative RT–PCR analysis, assessment of HIV LTR activity, and western blot analysis | Melittin dose-dependently inhibited virus production in T lymphoma or fibroblastoid cells infected with HIV-1. Melittin treatment of T cells diminished levels of Gag antigen, viral mRNA, and HIV LTR activity. | [ |
| HIV-1 (NLHX) and HIV-1 (NLYU2) | Virucidal assay (measuring luciferase activity) and HIV-1 capture assay (measuring total amount of viral protein p24 by ELISA) | Both free melittin and melittin-loaded nanoparticles reduced HIV-1 infectivity. Melittin-loaded nanoparticles captured more HIV-1 compared to blank nanoparticles. | [ |
| TMV (U1) | Virucidal assay (determining percentage of local lesions on tobacco leaves), bond-shift assay, and circular dichroism measurements | Melittin diminished infectivity of TMV and induced conformational changes in TMV RNA. | [ |
BoHV-1 bovine herpesvirus type 1, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, EV-71 enterovirus 71, GFP-fused influenza A green fluorescent protein-fused influenza A (A/PuertoRico/8/34) (H1N1), HIV-1 human immunodeficiency virus-1, HSV-1 herpes simplex virus 1, LTR long terminal repeat, MuLV Rauscher murine leukemia virus, RAV-2 Rous associated virus-2, RSV respiratory syncytial virus, RT-PCR quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, TMV tobacco mosaic virus, VHSV fish viral hemorrhagic septicemia rhabdovirus, VSV vesicular stomatitis virus
Anti-viral activities, cytotoxicity effects, and selectivity indices of melittin
| Family/virus (strain) | EC50 ± SD | Cells | CC50 ± SD | SI | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Junín virus (IV4454) | 0.86 μM | Vero | 8.51 μM | 9.89 | [ |
| Bovine viral diarrhea virus (NADL) | ND | MDCK | 2.32 μg/mL | ND | [ |
| HSV-1 (F) | 1.35 μM | Vero | 8.51 μM | 6.30 | [ |
| HSV-2 (G) | 2.05 μM | Vero | 8.51 μM | 4.15 | [ |
| GFP-fused HSV | 0.94 ± 0.07 μg/mL | Vero | 6.23 ± 0.07 μg/mL | 6.62 | [ |
| GFP-fused influenza A (PR8) | 1.15 ± 0.09 μg/mL | MDCK | 7.66 ± 0.94 μg/mL | 6.66 | [ |
| EV-71 | 0.76 ± 0.03 μg/mL | HeLa | 4.36 ± 0.54 μg/mL | 5.73 | [ |
| GFP-fused coxsakievirus (H3) | 0.99 ± 0.09 μg/mL | HeLa | 4.36 ± 0.54 μg/mL | 4.40 | [ |
| GFP-fused RSV | 0.35 ± 0.08 μg/mL | HEp2 | 5.02 ± 0.17 μg/mL | 14.34 | [ |
| GFP-fused VSV | 1.18 ± 0.09 μg/mL | Vero | 6.23 ± 0.07 μg/mL | 5.27 | [ |
| HIV-1 (NLHX) | 2.4 μM | Vaginal epithelial cells (VK2) | ND | ND | [ |
| HIV-1 (NLYU2) | 3.6 μM | Vaginal epithelial cells (VK2) | ND | ND | [ |
BoHV-1 bovine herpesvirus type 1, CC melittin concentration needed to lessen cell viability by 50%, EC melittin concentration required to decrease virus yield by 50%, EV-71 enterovirus 71, GFP-fused influenza A green fluorescent protein-fused influenza A (A/PuertoRico/8/34) (H1N1), HIV-1 human immunodeficiency virus-1, HSV-1 herpes simplex virus 1, ND not determined, MDCK Madin–Darby canine kidney, RSV respiratory syncytial virus, SD standard deviation, SI selectivity index (CC50/EC50)
Fig. 1Possible inhibitory mechanisms of melittin toward different viruses