| Literature DB >> 32560438 |
Vanessa Shi Li Goh1,2, Chee-Keng Mok1,2, Justin Jang Hann Chu1,2,3.
Abstract
Over the course of the last 50 years, the emergence of several arboviruses have resulted in countless outbreaks globally. With a high proportion of infections occurring in tropical and subtropical regions where arthropods tend to be abundant, Asia in particular is a region that is heavily affected by arboviral diseases caused by dengue, Japanese encephalitis, West Nile, Zika, and chikungunya viruses. Major gaps in protection against the most significant emerging arboviruses remains as there are currently no antivirals available, and vaccines are only available for some. A potential source of antiviral compounds could be discovered in natural products-such as vegetables, fruits, flowers, herbal plants, marine organisms and microorganisms-from which various compounds have been documented to exhibit antiviral activities and are expected to have good tolerability and minimal side effects. Polyphenols and plant extracts have been extensively studied for their antiviral properties against arboviruses and have demonstrated promising results. With an abundance of natural products to screen for new antiviral compounds, it is highly optimistic that natural products will continue to play an important role in contributing to antiviral drug development and in reducing the global infection burden of arboviruses.Entities:
Keywords: antiviral; arbovirus; natural products
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32560438 PMCID: PMC7356825 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25122796
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
List of common arboviruses circulating in Asia
| Virus | Family/Genus | Transmission | Symptoms | Treatment Available? | Vaccine Available? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DENV | Fever, hemorrhagic fever. | No | Yes [ | ||
| JEV | Fever, headache, seizures, encephalitis. | No | Yes [ | ||
| WNV | Fever, muscle weakness, encephalitis, meningitis. | No | Not for humans. Vaccines for horses are available [ | ||
| ZIKV | Fever, arthralgia, and myalgia. Neurological manifestations. | No | No | ||
| CHIKV | Fever, arthralgia, and myalgia. | No | No |
List of natural compounds shown to exhibit antiviral properties against arboviruses (DENV, JEV, WNV, ZIKV, and CHIKV)
| S/N | Compound Name/Chemical Structure | Source | Virus(es) Affected | Proposed Mode of Inhibition | Assay Used | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Baicalein | Roots of | CHIKV |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells Has potent virucidal activity against extracellular viral particles |
Time-of-addition assay, inactivation assay | [ |
| JEV |
Possibly inhibits virus entry to cells Has potent virucidal activity against extracellular viral particles |
Foci forming unit reduction assay, qRT-PCR | [ | |||
| 2 | Baicalin (main metabolite of baicalein) | Roots of | DEN-2 |
Interferes and inhibits DENV-2 in vitro replication at various stages of the virus replication cycle |
Foci reduction assay, virus yield reduction assay | [ |
| 3 | Curcumin | DEN-2 |
Three synthesized monoketone analogues of curcumin were shown to have better antiviral activity than curcumin Possibly inhibits virus by targeting host pathway essential for viral replication |
Plaque assay | [ | |
|
Virucidal activity on enveloped viruses |
Plaque reduction assay | [ | ||||
| CHIKV |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells |
Time-of-addition assay | [ | |||
| ZIKV |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells |
Time-of-addition assay | [ | |||
|
Virucidal activity on enveloped viruses |
Plaque reduction assay | [ | ||||
| 4 | Delphinidin | Pigment found in various flowers and fruits | DEN-1 to -4 |
Virucidal activity observed |
Plaque assay | [ |
| WNV |
Affects early stages of viral replication cycle Virucidal activity observed |
Plaque assay | [ | |||
| ZIKV |
Virucidal activity observed |
Plaque assay | [ | |||
| 5 | Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | Leaves of | DEN-1 to -4 |
Virucidal activity observed |
Plaque assay | [ |
| CHIKV |
Possibly inhibits attachment to host cells |
Pseudotyping of lentiviral vectors with CHIKV glycoprotein and transduced HEK 293T cells | [ | |||
| WNV |
Affects early stages of viral replication cycle Virucidal activity observed |
Plaque assay | [ | |||
| ZIKV |
Possibly inhibits attachment to host cells |
Pre-treatment assay | [ | |||
|
Virucidal activity observed |
Plaque assay | [ | ||||
| 6 | Fisetin | Pigment found in various flowers and fruits | CHIKV |
Inhibits early stages of viral replication |
Time-of-addition assay | [ |
| 7 | Harringtonine | CHIKV |
Possibly by inhibiting viral protein synthesis |
Time-of-addition assay, qRT-PCR, SDS-PAGE, western blot | [ | |
| 8 | Honokiol | Bark or seed cones of Magnolia tree | DEN-2 |
Inhibits viral entry to the host cells and suppresses in vitro viral replication |
Pre-treatment assay, viral yield reduction, and fluorescence focus formation assay | [ |
| 9 | Isoquercitrin | Various plants, including leaves of | ZIKV |
Inhibits viral entry to the host cell |
Time-of-addition assay | [ |
| 10 | Kaempferol | Various plant sources including tea, broccoli, grapefruit and apples | JEV |
Viral inactivation through binding to JEV frame-shift RNA |
qRT-PCR | [ |
| 11 | Naringenin | Citrus fruits such as grapefruit, bergamot, and tomatoes | DEN-1 to -4 |
Impairs DENV replication cycle |
Time-of-addition assay | [ |
| 12 | Pinocembrin | Honey, tea and red wine | ZIKV |
Inhibits post-entry processes of viral life cycle Inhibits viral RNA production and envelope protein synthesis |
Time-of-addition and time-of-removal assays, qRT-PCR, and western blot | [ |
| 13 | Quercetin | DEN-2 |
Inhibits intracellular viral replication but not viral attachment and entry processes |
Foci forming unit reduction assay, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| MAYV * |
Virucidal activity observed |
Virus yield inhibition assay | [ | |||
| 14 | Quercetagetin | Leaves of | CHIKV |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells Has potent neutralizing effect against extracellular CHIKV particles |
Time-of-addition assay, inactivation assay | [ |
| 15 | Quinine | Cinchona tree | DEN-1 to -4 |
Inhibits viral replication by reducing DENV RNA and viral protein synthesis |
Virus internalization assay, focus-forming unit (FFU) assay real time RT-PCR, western blot | [ |
| 16 | Resveratrol | Grapes and peanuts | ZIKV |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells Virucidal activity observed |
Pre-treatment and post-treatment assay, focus-forming assay, qRT-PCR, anti-adsorption and virus internalization inhibition assay | [ |
| 17 | ST081006 | Synthetic flavonoid from flavonoid-derivative library | DEN-1 to -4 |
Affects synthesis of both viral protein and RNA |
Pre-treatment, time-of-addition, and time-of-removal assays, qRT-PCR and western blot | [ |
* denotes arbovirus not currently circulating in Asia.
List of plant extracts that exhibited antiviral activity against arboviruses
| S/N | Plant Extract (active compound) | Source | Virus(es) Affected | Mode of Inhibition | Assay Used | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| DEN-1 to -4 |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells |
Foci-forming immunodetection assay, virus inactivation assay | [ | |
| ZIKV |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells | |||||
| 2 | Mushroom extracts^ | DEN-2 |
Inhibits viral attachment and entry to host cells |
Time-of-addition studies, plaque reduction assay, and RT-qPCR | [ | |
| 3 | Aerial parts of | DEN-1 to -4 |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells |
Time-of-addition assay | [ | |
| ZIKV |
Inhibits viral attachment to host cells | |||||
| 4 | Silymarin complex (Silybin) | Seeds of | CHIKV |
In vitro antiviral activity observed Inhibits post-entry stages of viral replication cycle |
Time-of-addition and time-of-removal studies, qRT-PCR and western blot | [ |
| MAYV * |
In vitro antiviral activity observed Protective effect against virus-induced oxidative stress |
– Plaque reduction assay, measuring reactive oxygen species production of MAYV infected cells before and after silymarin treatment | [ |
* denotes arbovirus not currently circulating in Asia. ^ denotes active compound not reported in literature.
Overview of the natural compounds which can inhibit the different arboviruses
| Type of Inhibitors | Antiviral Natural Compounds 1 |
|---|---|
| DENV inhibitors | Baicalein, curcumin, delphinidin, EGCG, honokiol, naringenin, quercetin, quinine, and ST081006 |
| JEV inhibitors | Baicalein, curcumin, and kaempferol |
| WNV inhibitors | Delphinidin and EGCG |
| ZIKV inhibitors | Curcumin, delphinidin, EGCG, isoquercitrin, pinocembrin, and resveratrol |
| CHIKV inhibitors | Baicalein, curcumin, EGCG, fisetin, harringtonine, and quercetagetin |
| MAYV inhibitor | Quercetin |
1 Refer to Table 2 for references for the respective compounds.
Overview of the plant extracts which can inhibit the different arboviruses
| Type of Inhibitors | Antiviral Plant Extracts 1 |
|---|---|
| DENV inhibitors | |
| ZIKV inhibitors | |
| CHIKV inhibitors | Silymarin complex |
| MAYV inhibitor | Silymarin complex |
1 Refer to Table 3 for references for the respective compounds.