| Literature DB >> 32825564 |
Paolino Ninfali1, Antonella Antonelli1, Mauro Magnani1, Emanuele Salvatore Scarpa1.
Abstract
This review summarizes the latest advancements in phytochemicals as functional antiviral agents. We focused on flavonoids, like apigenin, vitexin, quercetin, rutin and naringenin, which have shown a wide range of biological effects including antiviral activities. The molecular mechanisms of their antiviral effects mainly consist in the inhibition of viral neuraminidase, proteases and DNA/RNA polymerases, as well as in the modification of various viral proteins. Mixtures of different flavonoids or combination of flavonoids with antiviral synthetic drugs provide an enhancement of their antiviral effects. Recent strategies in drug delivery significantly contribute to overcoming the low bioavailability of flavonoids. Frequent viral infections worldwide have led to the need for new effective antiviral agents, which can be identified among the various phytochemicals. In this light, screening the antiviral activities of a cocktail of flavonoids would be advantageous in order to prevent viral infections and improve current antiviral therapies.Entities:
Keywords: antiviral properties; flavonoids; phytochemical delivery strategies; viral enzymes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32825564 PMCID: PMC7551920 DOI: 10.3390/nu12092534
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Chemical formulae of representative flavonoids with antiviral activities: apigenin, vitexin, vitexin-2-O-xyloside, vitexin-2-O-rhamnoside, quercetin, epigallocatechin-3-gallate, puerarin, kaempferol-7-O-glucoside, luteolin, myricetin, quercetin-3-rhamnoside, naringenin.
Classification and sources of the flavonoids described in this Review.
| Flavonoid | Class | Sources | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acacetin-7- | Flavone |
| [ |
| Apigenin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Apigenin-7- | Flavone |
| [ |
| Astragalin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Baicalein | Flavone |
| [ |
| Baicalin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Chamaejasmin | Flavanone |
| [ |
| Chrysin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Delphinidin-3-rutinoside | Anthocyanidin |
| [ |
| Diosmetin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate | Flavin |
| [ |
| Fisetin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Hyperoside | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Isokaempferide | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Isorhamnetin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Isoquercetin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Kaempferol | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Kaempferol-7- | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Ladanein | Flavone |
| [ |
| Luteolin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Myricetin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Myricetin-3-rhamnoside | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Myricetin-3-(6-rhamnosylgalactoside) | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Naringenin | Flavanone |
| [ |
| Nobiletin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Oroxylin A | Flavone |
| [ |
| Pectolinarin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Pinocembrin | Flavanone |
| [ |
| Puerarin | Isoflavone |
| [ |
| Quercetagetin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Quercetin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Quercetin-3-rhamnoside | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Quercitrin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Reynoutrin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Rutin | Flavanol |
| [ |
| Sanggenon O | Flavanone |
| [ |
| Tangeretin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Vitexin | Flavone |
| [ |
| Vitexin-2- | Flavone |
| [ |
| Vitexin-2- | Flavone |
| [ |
| Wogonin | Flavone |
| [ |
Molecular mechanisms and targets of antiviral activities of flavonoids reported in this review.
| Flavonoids | Inhibited Virus | Targets | Molecular Mechanisms | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apigenin, Luteolin | HCV | HCV replicase | Inhibition of HCV replication | [ |
| Vitexin, Apigenin-7- | Rhesus Rotavirus | Rotavirus virions | Inhibition of viral replication | [ |
| Vitexin | H1N1 influenza | TLR3, TLR4, | Decrease of inflammatory injury, | [ |
| TLR7 pathways | Increase of IFN-β levels | |||
| Vitexin | HSV-1 and HAV | HSV-1 virions, | Inhibition of viral replication | [ |
| HAV virions | ||||
| Apigenin, Isoquercetin, Quercetin | HCV | NS3 protease | Inhibition of HCV replication | [ |
| Quercetin-3-rhamnoside | Influenza A/WS/33 | Influenza virions | Inhibition of virus infection | [ |
| EGCG | HIV | Reverse transcriptase | Inhibition of HIV replication | [ |
| Myricetin-3-rhamnoside | HIV | Reverse transcriptase | Inhibition of HIV replication | [ |
| Quercetin, Catechin, Naringenin | HCV | NS5A, HSP70, | Inhibition of viral translation, | [ |
| HCV virions | Inhibition of virion assembly | |||
| Delphinidin-3-rutinoside | HSV-1 | NOX4 | Inhibition of HSV-1 replication | [ |
| EGCG | HBV | NTCP receptor | Inhibition of HBV entry into cells | [ |
| Quercetin | HCV | NS3 protease | Inhibition of HCV replication, | [ |
| Inhibition of virion production | ||||
| Luteolin, Quercetin | HCV | NS5B polymerase | Inhibition of HCV replication | [ |
| EGCG, | Dengue | NS1 | Inhibition of NS1 glycosylation | [ |
| Sanggenon O, Chamaejasmin | ||||
| Baicalin | Dengue Virus-2 (DENV-2) | DENV-2 virions | Inhibition of viral replication, | [ |
| Viricidal activity | ||||
| Baicalin, Baicalein | H1N1 influenza | Nrf2 | Inhibition of viral replication | [ |
| Luteolin | HCV | NS5B polymerase | Inhibition of HCV replication | [ |
| Naringenin, Quercetin | HCV | Envelope 2 protein, | Inhibition of virion assembly, | [ |
| NS5A, NS3 | Inhibition of HCV entry into cells | |||
| Tangeretin, Nobiletin | RSV | Phosphoprotein P | Inhibition of viral replication, | [ |
| Inhibition of RSV entry into cells | ||||
| Kaempferol-7- | HIV | HIV protease | Inhibition of virion production | [ |
| Quercetagetin | HCV | NS5B polymerase | Inhibition of RNA binding to NS5B | [ |
| Pinocembrin | Zika | Viral RNAs | Envelope protein synthesis inhibition | [ |
Figure 2Viral life cycle of Influenza viruses (V Baltimore class: negative ssRNA) and phytochemical quercetin-3-rhamnoside used as virus inhibitor. Virion of influenza virus [46].
Figure 3On the left, phytochemicals quercetin, apigenin and luteolin can inhibit the catalytic activity of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Non-Structural Protein 5B (NS5B) polymerase, while phytochemicals quercetin, epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) and apigenin are able to inhibit the activity of HCV NS3 protease. On the right, EGCG induces the internalization of the Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) receptor sodium taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide (NTCP), inhibiting entry of HBV virus in human hepatocytes. HCV virion [49]; HBV virion [50].
Figure 4Phytochemicals EGCG and kaempferol-7-glucoside can inhibit the activity of the homodimer of HIV protease, while EGCG and myricetin-3-rhamnoside are able to inhibit the catalytic activity of HIV reverse transcriptase. Various antiviral compounds have been loaded into human red blood cells in order to use these drugs against HIV and HIV-infected cells, like Fludarabine. HIV virion [51]. Signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1).