| Literature DB >> 35736188 |
Silvia Lomartire1, Ana M M Gonçalves1,2.
Abstract
In the last decades, the interest in seaweed has significantly increased. Bioactive compounds from seaweed's currently receive major attention from pharmaceutical companies as they express several interesting biological activities which are beneficial for humans. The structural diversity of seaweed metabolites provides diverse biological activities which are expressed through diverse mechanisms of actions. This review mainly focuses on the antiviral activity of seaweed's extracts, highlighting the mechanisms of actions of some seaweed molecules against infection caused by different types of enveloped viruses: influenza, Lentivirus (HIV-1), Herpes viruses, and coronaviruses. Seaweed metabolites with antiviral properties can act trough different pathways by increasing the host's defense system or through targeting and blocking virus replication before it enters host cells. Several studies have already established the large antiviral spectrum of seaweed's bioactive compounds. Throughout this review, antiviral mechanisms and medical applications of seaweed's bioactive compounds are analyzed, suggesting seaweed's potential source of antiviral compounds for the formulation of novel and natural antiviral drugs.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; HSV; IAV; antiviral activity; enveloped virus; polyphenol; polysaccharide; seaweed
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35736188 PMCID: PMC9228758 DOI: 10.3390/md20060385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 6.085
Figure 1Schematic representation of influenza virus mechanism of cell infection. ① the spike protein hemagglutinin bond with the receptor on the host cell membrane; ② the virus enters into the cell by endocytosis; ③ the spike protein neuraminidase mediates the viral RNA and release, which enters the nucleus where it is replicated by the viral RNA polymerase; ④ viral mRNA is used to make viral proteins; ⑤ new viral particles are released into the extracellular matrix and the host cell continues to make new virus particles.
Figure 2Schematic representation of HIV infection. ① binding of the virus to the host cell membrane; ② fusion of the virus and uncoating: the virus core uncoats into the cytoplasm of the target cell freeing the viral RNA; ③ reverse transcription: the viral RNA is transcribed into an RNA/DNA hybrid double helix; ④ integration of the viral gene to human DNA; ⑤ replication; ⑥ assembly of the new viral particles and proteins; ⑦ budding process and release of the new virus.
Pre-clinical studies on antiviral activity of seaweed’s bioactive compounds against influenza virus, Lentivirus, HSVs, SARS-CoV-2.
| Virus Investigated | Source of Antiviral Compound | Study Case | Compound | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IAV |
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro/in vivo | Fucoidan | [ |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vivo | Fucoidan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | sulphated galactan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Eckol, 7-phloreckol, phlorofucofuroeckol A, dieckol | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | phlorofucofuroeckol A | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | ɩ/κ/ν-carrageenan | [ | |
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vivo | k-carrageenan | [ | |
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vivo | Carrageenan + zanamivir | [ | |
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro/in vivo | k/ɩ-carrageenan | [ | |
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro | κ-carrageenan | [ | |
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro/in vivo | λ-carrageenan | [ | |
| Avian influenza viruses (H5N3, H7N2) |
| Pre-clinical test: in vivo | Fucogalactan | [ |
| HIV-1 |
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Sulphated fucan | [ |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ | |
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Galactofucan, fucan | [ | ||
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Galactofucan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Crude extracts | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Crude extracts | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Crude extracts | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | 6,6′-bieckol | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | 8,8-bieckol, 8,4-dieckol | [ | |
| HSV-1 |
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Crude water extract | [ |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Crude water extract | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro/in vivo | Fucoidan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Sulphated polysaccharide | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | ι-carrageenan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Sulphated polysaccharide | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Enzymatic extract | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Dichloromethane extracts | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Sulphated galactans | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Crude extract | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Sulphated polysaccharides | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | k/ɩ/v-carrageenan | [ | |
| HSV-1, HSV-2 |
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Dichloromethane:methanol extract | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Crude extract | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro/vivo | Crude galactans | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Carrageenan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Au/Ag-nanoparticles synthesized by seaweed extract | [ | |
| HSV-1, HSV-2, EHV3, BoHV1, SuHV1, FeHV1 |
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | λ-carrageenan | [ |
| HSV-2 |
| Pre-clinical test: in vivo | ʎ-carrageenan | [ |
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro/vivo | Griffithsin | [ | ||
| SARS-CoV-2 |
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidans (RPI-27, RPI-28) | [ |
| Purchased fucoidan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ | |
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro | ɩ-carrageenan | ||
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro | λ-carrageenan | [ | |
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro | k/ɩ/ʎ-carrageenan | [ | |
|
| Pre-clinical test: in vitro | Fucoidan | [ | |
| Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro | ɩ-carrageenan | [ | |
| SARS-CoV-2 and variants (Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta) | Purchased carrageenan | Pre-clinical test: in vitro | k/ɩ/ʎ-carrageenan | [ |
Clinical studies on antiviral activity of seaweed’s bioactive compounds against influenza virus, HSVs, SARS-CoV-2.
| Virus Investigated | Bioactive Compound | Clinical Study | Actions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IAV | ɩ-carrageenan | Clinical test: 254 patients | Regress of and severe symptoms of influenza | [ |
| Fucoidan | Clinical test: 70 patients | Higher antibody titers after fucoidan uptake | [ | |
| ɩ-carrageenan | Clinical test: 35 patients | Decrease for the viral capacity in the nasal mucosa in patients treated with carrageenan-spray, while placebo treatment did not affect viral replication | [ | |
| Carrageenan | Clinical test: 211 patients | Carrageenan-based nasal spray reduced the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and increased the level of IL-1 and IL-12p40 receptor antagonists (anti-inflammatory action) | [ | |
| HSV-1 | Fucoidan | Clinical test: 2 patients | Infection, healing process and physical discomfort improved after 1 week of fucoidan-cream administration | [ |
| SARS-CoV-2 | ɩ-carrageenan | Clinical test: 400 patients | Decrease in COVID-19 Incidence of COVID-19 differs significantly between subjects receiving the nasal spray with ɩ-carrageenan | [ |
Clinical studies on antiviral activity of seaweed’s bioactive compounds against influenza virus, HSVs, SARS-CoV-2.
| Seaweeds Compounds as Antivirals against Enveloped Viruses | Reference | |
|---|---|---|
| Pros | Broad antiviral spectrum | [ |
| In vitro/in vivo inhibition of virus replication | [ | |
| Enhanced antibody production and immunomodulation activity | [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| Prevention of the virus entry into the host cell | [ | |
| RT inhibition potential | [ | |
| No cytotoxicity effect | [ | |
| Compounds can be included in prophylaxis treatments | [ | |
| Cons | Antiviral activity depends on the chemical structure (e.g., low antiviral activity is given by low number of sulphated groups) | [ |
| Strong anticoagulant activity of carrageenan could provoke adverse reaction in antiviral treatments | [ | |
| Antiviral activity is influenced by extraction methods | [ | |
| Poor adherence/non-frequent use of seaweed-based treatment decreases antiviral activity | [ | |