| Literature DB >> 35216019 |
Hadrien Claus-Desbonnet1, Elsa Nikly1, Vanya Nalbantova2, Diana Karcheva-Bahchevanska2, Stanislava Ivanova2, Guillaume Pierre1, Niko Benbassat2,3, Plamen Katsarov4,5, Philippe Michaud1, Paolina Lukova2, Cédric Delattre1,6.
Abstract
In the current context of the COVID-19 pandemic, it appears that our scientific resources and the medical community are not sufficiently developed to combat rapid viral spread all over the world. A number of viruses causing epidemics have already disseminated across the world in the last few years, such as the dengue or chinkungunya virus, the Ebola virus, and other coronavirus families such as Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS-CoV) and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS-CoV). The outbreaks of these infectious diseases have demonstrated the difficulty of treating an epidemic before the creation of vaccine. Different antiviral drugs already exist. However, several of them cause side effects or have lost their efficiency because of virus mutations. It is essential to develop new antiviral strategies, but ones that rely on more natural compounds to decrease the secondary effects. Polysaccharides, which have come to be known in recent years for their medicinal properties, including antiviral activities, are an excellent alternative. They are essential for the metabolism of plants, microorganisms, and animals, and are directly extractible. Polysaccharides have attracted more and more attention due to their therapeutic properties, low toxicity, and availability, and seem to be attractive candidates as antiviral drugs of tomorrow.Entities:
Keywords: SARS-CoV; antiviral activities; polysaccharides; replication inhibition; severe acute respiratory syndrome; side effects; virus and coronavirus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35216019 PMCID: PMC8879384 DOI: 10.3390/v14020426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Commercialized antiviral compounds.
| Therapeutic Class | Mechanism | Type | Target Viruses | Antivirals | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell entry inhibitors | Fusion inhibitors | Polyanions, nonspecific inhibitors | Enveloped viruses: HIV, HSV, CMV, RSV | Polyanions in development: cosalane derivatives, polyoxometalates, polycarboxylates polysulfates, polysulfonates, negatively charged albumins, sulphated polysaccharides | [ |
| Receptor and co-receptor antagonist analogues | HIV-1 | Maraviroc | [ | ||
| Fusion and penetration inhibitors | Fusion inhibitor | HIV-1 | Enfuvirtide | [ | |
| Uncoating inhibitor | Influenza A | Amantadine, rimantadine | [ | ||
| Replication inhibitors | Nucleosides analogue inhibitors (activation by triphosphorylation) with competitive inhibition | Viral DNA polymerase inhibitors | Herpes viruses (HSV-1, HSV-2, VZV, CMV, EBV, HHV-6, HBV) | Foscarnet, acyclovir, famciclovir, brivudine, valganciclovir, penciclovir, ganciclovir, entecavir, telbuvine | [ |
| Reverse transcriptase inhibitors | HIV | NRTIs: zidovudine, didanosine, zalcitabine, stavudine, abacavir, emtricitabine, lamivudine | [ | ||
| Non-nucleoside inhibitors | NNRTIs: efavirenz, nevirapine, delavirdine, etravirine | [ | |||
| Acyclic nucleoside phosphonates (activation by diphosphorylation) | Acyclic nucleoside phosphonates (ANP) | Herpes viruses (HSV-1, HSV-2, VZV, CMV, HHV-6, EBV, HBV), HIV-1, HIV-2 | Cidofovir, adefovir, tenofovir | [ | |
| Assembly, maturation, and release inhibitors | Packaging inhibitor | Viral terminase enzyme complex inhibitors | CMV | Letermovir | [ |
| Maturation inhibitor | Viral protease inhibitors (polyprotein precursors cleavage) | HIV-1, HIV-2 | Amprenavir, fosamprenavir, atazanavir, indinavir, lopinavir, nelfinavir, ritonavir, saquinavir, darunavir, tipranavir, atazanavir | [ | |
| Release inhibitors | Viral neuraminidase inhibitors | Influenza A | Zanamivir, oseltamivir, pramivir | [ |
HIV: human immunodeficiency virus; HSV: herpes simplex virus; CMV: cytomegalovirus; VZV: varicella-zoster virus; RSV: respiratory syncytial virus; EBV: Epstein—Barr virus; HBV: hepatitis B virus.
Figure 1Chemical structure of different cell entry inhibitors.
Figure 2Chemical structures of different replication inhibitors. NRTI: nucleosides reverse transcriptase inhibitor; NNRTI: non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; ANP: acyclic nucleoside phosphonate.
Figure 3Chemical structure of different post-replication inhibitors.
Polysaccharides from natural sources reported to have antiviral activities.
| Origin | Polysaccharides | Antiviral Effects | Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Animal | ||||
| Bovine and porcine tissues | Heparin | Anti-CMV, HSV, HPV, DENV, JEV, YFV, ZIKV, HIV | Inhibition of adsorption | [ |
| Cartilage of animals | Chondroitin sulfate | Anti-HIV, HSV, HTLV-1, DENV | Inhibition of adsorption | [ |
| Crustacean shell | Chitosan | Anti-bacteriophages, plant viruses, HIV, FCV-F9 | Direct virucidal effect | [ |
| Shellfish | Shellfish polysaccharide | Anti-HBV, HIV-1, IFV, HSV-1 | Inhibition of adsorption | [ |
|
Algal and plant | ||||
| Brown algae | Fucoidan | Anti-HIV, DENV, IAV, NDV, HSV | Inhibition of adsorption and transcription | [ |
| Laminarin | Anti-HIV | Inhibition of adsorption and transcription | [ | |
| Alginate | Anti-HIV, HBV, IAV, TMV | Inhibition of transcription | [ | |
| Red algae | Anti-DENV, HAV, HRV, IAV, HPV, ECMV, HSV, SFV, ASV, VV | Inhibition of adsorption, penetration, uncoating, replication and transcription | [ | |
| Anti-enterovirus, IAV, HSV, CMV, Sindbis virus, VV, HIV, DENV, TMV | Inhibition of replication and transcription | [ | ||
| Anti-DENV, HSV, HPV, HAV, CMV, HIV, Sindbis virus, VV, BoHV-1, SuHV-1, RABV | Direct virucidal effect, inhibition of adsorption | [ | ||
| TMV | - | [ | ||
| Green algae | Ulvan | Anti-IFV-A, JEV, NDV | Inhibition of penetration and uncoating | [ |
| Diatom (microalga) | Naviculan | Anti-HIV, HSV-1, HSV-2, IFV | Inhibition of adsorption | [ |
| Microalgae | Sulfated polysaccharide | Anti IAV, HIV-1, HSV-1, IFV-A, IFV-B, RSV-A, RSV-B, PIFV-2, EMCV | Inhibition of penetration and replication | [ |
| Edible | Edible polysaccharide | Anti-DEV, HSV-1 | Inhibition of adsorption, penetration and uncoating | [ |
| Medicinal plants | Medicinal plant polysaccharide | Anti-HSV-2, PV-1, PV-2, DHAV, BoHV-1, HBV, H1N1, H3N2, HIV, rotavirus | Inhibition of adsorption and replication | [ |
|
Mushroom | ||||
| Mushrooms | Mushroom polysaccharide | Anti-IFV-A *, PV-1, HIV-1, HBV, IHNV | Inhibition of transcription and replication | [ |
|
Microbial | ||||
| Marine bacterias | EPS | Anti-HSV-2, HSV-1 | Inhibition of adsorption | [ |
| Cyanobacterias | Calcium spirulan | Anti-HSV-1, HCMV, measles virus, mumps virus, IAV, HIV-1 | Inhibition of adsorption and replication | [ |
| Nostoflan | Anti-HSV-1, HSV-2, IAV, HCMV | Inhibition of adsorption | [ | |
* Inhibitory effect observed in vivo.
Figure 4Main structures of antiviral polysaccharides isolated from animals: (a) heparin, (b) chitosan, and (c) chondroitin sulfate.
Figure 5Main antiviral polysaccharides isolated from algae: (a) carrageenans, (b) alginates, (c) laminarin, and (d) ulvans.
Studies investigating the antiviral activity of polysaccharides, 2020–2021.
| Source | Type of Extract | Virus Involved | Object of Study | Antiviral Activity | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water extraction | Betanodavirus | Fishes | Cytopathic effect reduction assay | Significant antiviral activity. | [ | |
| Alcohol precipitation | Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) | mice | In vitro and in vivo antiviral | Fractions (Mw ≥ 10,000 Da) inhibit the RSV proliferation and reduce the lung lesions induced by RSV. | [ | |
| Red algae | Water extraction | Influenza viruses | Madin–Darby canine kidney cells, African green monkey kidney cells, human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 T cells, mice. | In vitro and in vivo antiviral | [ | |
| Water extraction and alcohol precipitation | H1N1 influenza virus | Cell real-time monitoring system and Reed-Muench mice model | In vitro and in vivo antiviral | Good anti-influenza virus activity. | [ | |
|
| Ethanol extraction | Hepatitis B virus (HBV) | HepG2.2.15 cell | In vitro antiviral | No toxicity at <400 μg/mL. Doses of 50, 100, and 200 μg/mL significantly reduced extracellular and intracellular levels of HBsAg, HBeAg, and HBV DNA in HepG2.2.15 cells. | [ |
|
| Water and ethanol extraction | Influenza virus A California/07/09 (H1N1pdm) | The neutral red adsorption test was used in the study | In vitro antiviral | The ethanol extracts exhibit a more potent antiviral effect than that of water extracts. | [ |
Polysaccharide derivatives reported to have antiviral activities.
| Modifications | Polysaccharides | Antiviral Effects | Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sulfatation | Dextran sulfate | Anti-ZIKV, IAV *, enveloped viruses | Inhibition of adsorption and replication | [ |
| 3-O-Sulfated heparin | Anti-HSV-1 | Inhibition of adsorption | [ | |
| MI-S, FR-S | Anti HSV-1 *, HSV-2 * | Inhibition of adsorption | [ | |
| sAAPs, sTPS | Anti-NDV | - | [ | |
| SPLCf | Anti HSV, PV-1 | Inhibition of adsorption and transcription | [ | |
| sCVPS | Anti-NDV * | - | [ | |
| S1F1, S2F1 | Anti HSV-1, HSV-2 | - | [ | |
| NCMCS | Anti-HIV-1, RLV | Inhibition of virus adsorption | [ | |
| Anti-IAV *, HIV | Inhibition of replication | [ | ||
| Phosphorylation | pRCPS, pCIPS | Anti-DHAV | Inhibition of replication | [ |
| pRCPS | Anti-CPV | - | [ | |
| Complexes | Chitosan–chondroitin sulfate | Anti-HIV | Inhibition of replication | [ |
| Enzymatic modification | Chitooligosaccharides | Anti-HIV-1 | Inhibition of adsorption | [ |
| Acylation + sulfation | O-acylated carrageenans | Anti-HIV | - | [ |
| Aminoderivatized | Aminoethyl-chitosan | Anti-HIV-1 | - | [ |
* Inhibitory effect observed in vivo. Sulfated Auricularia auricula polysaccharides (sAAPs), sulfated Tremella polysaccharides (sTPS), sulfated polysaccharide of Caesalpinia ferrea (SPLCf), sulfated Chuanmingshen violaceum polysaccharide (sCVPS), N-carboxymethylchitosan-N-O-sulfate (NCMCS), phosphorylated Codonopsis pilosula polysaccharide (pCPPS), phosphorylated Chrysanthemum indicum polysaccharide (pCIPS), and phosphorylated Radix Cyathulae officinalis Kuan polysaccharides (pRCPS).
Figure 6Steps of viral replication inhibition by antiviral polysaccharides.