| Literature DB >> 33809963 |
Arumugam Vijaya Anand1, Balasubramanian Balamuralikrishnan2, Mohandass Kaviya1, Kathirvel Bharathi1, Aluru Parithathvi1, Meyyazhagan Arun3, Nachiappan Senthilkumar4, Shanmugam Velayuthaprabhu5, Muthukrishnan Saradhadevi6, Naif Abdullah Al-Dhabi7, Mariadhas Valan Arasu7,8, Mohammad Iqbal Yatoo9, Ruchi Tiwari10, Kuldeep Dhama11.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus-2 (SARS-CoV-2), is the most important health issue, internationally. With no specific and effective antiviral therapy for COVID-19, new or repurposed antiviral are urgently needed. Phytochemicals pose a ray of hope for human health during this pandemic, and a great deal of research is concentrated on it. Phytochemicals have been used as antiviral agents against several viruses since they could inhibit several viruses via different mechanisms of direct inhibition either at the viral entry point or the replication stages and via immunomodulation potentials. Recent evidence also suggests that some plants and its components have shown promising antiviral properties against SARS-CoV-2. This review summarizes certain phytochemical agents along with their mode of actions and potential antiviral activities against important viral pathogens. A special focus has been given on medicinal plants and their extracts as well as herbs which have shown promising results to combat SARS-CoV-2 infection and can be useful in treating patients with COVID-19 as alternatives for treatment under phytotherapy approaches during this devastating pandemic situation.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; antiviral agents; herbs; medicinal plants; phytochemicals
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809963 PMCID: PMC8004635 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26061775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Structure of COVID-19 [Source: http://ruleof6ix.fieldofscience.com/2012/09/a-new-coronavirus-should-youcare html (accessed on 20 June 2020)].
Figure 2Pathology of COVID-19 [Source: Leila Mousavizadeh, Sorayya Ghasemi, Genotype and phenotype of COVID-19: Their roles in pathogenesis. Journal of Microbiology, Immunology and Infection. 2020].
Indian plants with antiviral properties.
| Common Name | Botanical and Family Name | Native | Parts Used | Traditional Uses | Antiviral Property |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liquorice or Yashtimadu | Central and Southern Asia, Russia, Northern India (Sub-Himalayan and Punjab), Mediterranean, Afghanistan, and Iran | Roots | Extensively used in Indian traditional medicine systems like Ayurveda and Siddha for ulcer, aliment, purgative, demulcent, antitussive, and expectorant | SARS-related coronavirus, H5N1 influenza A virus, HCV, HIV-1. influenza A virus pneumonia, respiratory syncytial virus and SARS- CoV-2 [ | |
| Neem | India, Bangladesh, Burma, Nepal, and West Africa | Leaves, roots, twigs and seeds | Different parts of neem are used as an important ingredient in Ayurveda, Unani and Homeopathy medicine | Dengue virus and SARS-CoV-2 [ | |
| Green chireta | South India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, USA, Thailand, Jamaica, and West Indies | Leaves and roots | The plant has a pivotal role in Chinese and Indian (Siddha and Ayurveda) traditional system for different formulation against various diseases diabetes, sore throat, fever, cirrhosis, malaria, viral hepatitis, liver cancer, and upper respiratory infections | Chikungunya virus, Influenza A, Flaviviruses, HIV antigen-positive H9 cells, and SARS-CoV-2 [ | |
| Tulsi | India, Iran, Italy, Egypt, the USA, and France | Whole plant seeds, leaves and roots | The plant has been well documented in Ayurveda, Siddha, and Greek medicinal system which is used for various treatment purposes such as fever, common cold, malaria fever, epilepsy, bronchitis, migraine, headache, convulsions, hepatic disease, stomach disorders, and heart diseases | H1N1 and SARS-CoV-2 [ | |
| Turmeric | India, Nepal, China, Bangladesh, and Pakistan | Rhizomes | In Ayurveda, turmeric has a long history of use because of the presence of various beneficial properties used in the treatment of diabetic wounds, fungal infection, cough, rheumatism, hepatic and biliary disorder | Dengue virus, HSV-1 and SARS-CoV-2 [ | |
| Ashwagandha | India, Sind, Baluchistan, Afghanistan, and Sri Lanka | Roots | The plant is well formulated in Ayurveda, Siddha, Unani and Tibetan Medicine system. Traditionally, | HSV-1 and SARS-CoV-2 [ | |
| Garlic | Central Asia, China, Mediterranean region, Mexico, Egypt and in Southern and Central Europe | Cloves, flowers and leaves | Garlic has been traditionally used as hypolipidemic, antihypertensive and anti-thrombotic agent in Ayurvedic, Chinese, and Islamic medicine | Influenza virus A and SARS-CoV-2 [ | |
| Guduchi | Indian subcontinent and China | Roots, stem and leaves | The plant is a common shrub used as anti-allergic, anti-inflammatory, antiperiodic, anti-diabetic,, and anti-spasmodic properties in Ayurvedic medicine | HSV-1 and SARS-CoV-2 [ | |
| Drumstick | Sub-Himalayan tracts of India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Afghanistan | Roots, flowers, leaves and pod | The traditional use of plant includes antispasmodic, antiparalytic, antiviral, analgesic, anti-inflammatory, antiepileptic, stimulant and cardiac circulatory tonic | HSV-1 and SARS-CoV-2 [ |
Figure 3Possible antiviral mechanism of Indian medicinal plants.
Plant compounds and their antiviral properties.
| S. No | Name of the Compound | Structure | Antiviral Property against | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 1. FLAVONOIDS |
| HSV-1 and HSV-2, SARS-CoV-2 | [ |
| 1.1. Catechins (Green tea) | ||||
| 1.2. Quercetin |
| HCV and SARS-CoV-2 | [ | |
| 1.3. Apigenin |
| Enterovirus-71, foot and mouth disease virus, HCV, African swine fever virus, and influenza A | [ | |
| 1.4. Baicalin |
| Enterovirus, dengue virus, respiratory syncytical virus, Newcastle disease virus, HIV, and HBV | [ | |
| 1.5. Luteolin |
| SARS-CoV-2, rhesus rota virus, chickenkuniya virus, and Japanese encephalitis virus | [ | |
| 1.6. Kaempferol |
| HSV-1, HSV-2, HIV, HCV, H1NI, H9N2, Japanese encephalitis virus, and SARS-CoV-2 | [ | |
| 2. | 2. ALKALOIDS |
| Poliomyelitis virus, SARS-CoV (BJ001 and BJ006) | [ |
| 2.1. Lycorine | ||||
| 2.2. Sophoridine |
| Enterovirus-71 and coxsackievirus | [ | |
| 3. | 3. SAPONINS |
| HSV-1, poliovirus, and SARS-CoV 2 | [ |
| 4. | 4. LIGNANS |
| HBV and duck HBV | [ |
| 4.1. Nordihydroguairetic acid ( |
| DENV, zika virus or West Nile virus, and influenza A virus | [ | |
| 4.2 Arctigenin |
| Influenza A virus and HIV-1 | [ | |
| 4.3. Yatein ( |
| HSV-1 | [ | |
| 4.4. Diphyllin (Genus- |
| Zika virus and influenza A virus | [ | |
| 4.5.Patentiflorin A |
| Zika virus and HIV | [ | |
| 4.6. Clemastanin B |
| Influenza A virus | [ | |
| 4.7. Silymarin C |
| HCV | [ | |
| 5. | 5. TANNINS |
| HSV and HIV | [ |
| 5.1. Geraniin | ||||
| 5.2. 1,3,4,6-tetra-O-galloyl-β-d-glucose ( |
| |||
| 5.3. Corilagin |
|
Mechanism of antiviral action of phytochemical compounds and its derivatives.
| S. No | Name of the Compound | Mechanism of Action | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Polysulphates (sulphated polysaccharides) |
Shields the viral envelope gp120 that is essential for the viral attachment | [ |
| 2. | EGCG and ECG |
Decreases the viral attachment in MDCK cells EGCG inhibits the neuraminidase activity more efficiently than EGC EGCG binds to the envelope protein Gb, Gd or other envelope proteins of HSV-1 and HSV-2 that are essential for its fusion with the host cell membrane Catechin binds to the ACE2 and receptor binding domain of viral S-protein of SARS-CoV-2 | [ |
| 3. | Quercetin |
In HCV the heat shock protein activity is inhibited that is essential for non-structural protein 5A mediated viral ribosome entry site and it also inhibits NS3 protease involved in HCV replication Stops the rhinovirus pathogenesis at various steps like endocytosis, protein synthesis and viral genome transcription Vitamin C along with quercetin has synergistic effect in treating COVID-19 patients | [ |
| 4. | Apigenin |
Acts against the African swine fever virus by decreasing its protein synthesis In picrona virus it inhibits the viral protein entry In enterovirus-71 it inhibits the viral RNA association with transacting factors In HCV it inhibits the viral replication | [ |
| 5. | Baicalin |
In case of HBV, it inhibits the template for viral protein and DNA synthesis In the case of HCV also it inhibits the protein and RNA synthesis The replication of the avian influenza virus is inhibited by interfering with the neuraminidase activity In influenza A virus infection it stimulates the production of IFN-γ in the CD4+ and CD8+ cells It was found to have increased binding property with NS3/NS2B protein and also has closer interaction with NS5 protein of the dengue virus | [ |
| 6. | Luteolin |
In HIV it inhibits the clade B and C–T at driven transactivation In Epstein-Barr virus it decreases the activity of early genes In enterovirus 71 and coxsackievirus A 16 it disrupts the viral replication Luteolin inhibits the viral entry and fusion of SARS CoV-2 with human receptors | [ |
| 7. | Rhamnose residue containing kaempferol |
In HIV, it inhibits the reverse transcriptase enzyme In H1N1 and H9N2, it affects the neuraminidase activity In Japanese encephalitis virus, it inhibits the RNA frame shift Inhibits coronavirus release by effecting 3a channel Inhibits N3 binding site in the SARS-CoV-2 Mpro | [ |
| 8. | Kaempferol 3,7-bisrhamnoside |
Effective against HCV NS3 protease | [ |
| 9. | Triterpene saponin |
It acts against the HSV-1 and poliovirus 2 by protecting the host cells from cell damage and also by decreasing the viral production | [ |
| 10. | Triterpenoid saponin TS21 |
In HSV it inhibits the viral capsid protein synthesis and also replication Saponins has anti-inflammatory activities, anti-proliferative effect, immunomodulatory and antiviral activities including SARS-CoV | [ |
| 11. | Niranthin |
In HBV infection it inhibits the antigen expression In the case of duck HBV infection it inhibits the DNA replication | [ |
| 12. | Nordihydroguairetic acid |
In the case of HCV, it affects the viral proliferation by inhibiting the genome replication and viral assembly It suppresses the influenza A virus replication | [ |
| 13. | Terameprocol |
It inhibits the West Nile virus replication | [ |
| 14. | Arctigenin |
It inhibits the expression of P17 and P24 proteins of the HIV In the case of HIV-1 and HSV, it protects the host by increasing the production of IFN | [ |
| 15. | Yatein |
In HeLa cells, it inhibits the HSV-1 virus DNA synthesis by inhibiting the expression of ICP0 and ICP4 | [ |
| 16. | Diphyllin |
It inhibits the vacuolar ATPase in case of zika virus In the case of influenza A virus, it inhibits the infection by interfering with the downstream process | [ |
| 17. | Patentiflorin A |
Prevents the fusion of the cell membrane of the host by inhibiting the acidification of endosomal and lysosomal cells In HIV it inhibits the reverse transcriptase | [ |
| 18. | Clemastanin B |
In influenza A virus it affects the viral endocytosis and also the ribonucleoprotein export | [ |
| 19. | Silymarin C |
It inhibits the HCV production and also increases the anti-inflamatory and antiproliferative gene expression Lignins exhibits antiviral property by inhibition of viral replication, protein and cytokine expression, and apoptosis thus they may have effect on SARS-CoV-2 | [ |
Figure 4Antiviral properties of plant compounds.