Inhibitory and combinatorial effect of diphyllin, a v-ATPase blocker, on influenza viruses

•Diphyllin inhibits endosomal acidification in MDCK cells and A549 cells.•Treatment with diphyllin alters the cellular susceptibility to the influenza virus.•Diphyllin demonstrated a broad-spectrum antiviral activity.•The combination of diphyllin and other drugs showed an enhanced antiviral effect....

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Veröffentlicht in:Antiviral research 2013-09, Vol.99 (3), p.371-382
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Hui-Wen, Cheng, Jenna Xiao, Liu, Ming-Tsan, King, Kevin, Peng, Ju-Yi, Zhang, Xin-Quan, Wang, Ching-Ho, Shresta, Sujan, Schooley, Robert T., Liu, Yu-Tsueng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Diphyllin inhibits endosomal acidification in MDCK cells and A549 cells.•Treatment with diphyllin alters the cellular susceptibility to the influenza virus.•Diphyllin demonstrated a broad-spectrum antiviral activity.•The combination of diphyllin and other drugs showed an enhanced antiviral effect. An influenza pandemic poses a serious threat to humans and animals. Conventional treatments against influenza include two classes of pathogen-targeting antivirals: M2 ion channel blockers (such as amantadine) and neuraminidase inhibitors (such as oseltamivir). Examination of the mechanism of influenza viral infection has shown that endosomal acidification plays a major role in facilitating the fusion between viral and endosomal membranes. This pathway has led to investigations on vacuolar ATPase (v-ATPase) activity, whose role as a regulating factor on influenza virus replication has been verified in extensive genome-wide screenings. Blocking v-ATPase activity thus presents the opportunity to interfere with influenza viral infection by preventing the pH-dependent membrane fusion between endosomes and virions. This study aims to apply diphyllin, a natural compound shown to be as a novel v-ATPase inhibitor, as a potential antiviral for various influenza virus strains using cell-based assays. The results show that diphyllin alters cellular susceptibility to influenza viruses through the inhibition of endosomal acidification, thus interfering with downstream virus replication, including that of known drug-resistant strains. In addition, combinatorial treatment of the host-targeting diphyllin with pathogen-targeting therapeutics (oseltamivir and amantadine) demonstrates enhanced antiviral effects and cell protection in vitro.
ISSN:0166-3542
1872-9096
DOI:10.1016/j.antiviral.2013.06.014