Cohen Tobias, Williams John D, Opperman Timothy J, Sanchez Roberto, Lurain Nell S, Tortorella Domenico
Department of Microbiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA.
Microbiotix Inc. Worcester, Massachusetts, USA.
J Virol. 2016 Nov 14;90(23):10715-10727. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01050-16. Print 2016 Dec 1.
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a ubiquitous human pathogen that increases the morbidity and mortality of immunocompromised individuals. The current FDA-approved treatments for CMV infection are intended to be virus specific, yet they have significant adverse side effects, including nephrotoxicity and hematological toxicity. Thus, there is a medical need for safer and more effective CMV therapeutics. Using a high-content screen, we identified the cardiac glycoside convallatoxin as an effective compound that inhibits CMV infection. Using a panel of cardiac glycoside variants, we assessed the structural elements critical for anti-CMV activity by both experimental and in silico methods. Analysis of the antiviral effects, toxicities, and pharmacodynamics of different variants of cardiac glycosides identified the mechanism of inhibition as reduction of methionine import, leading to decreased immediate-early gene translation without significant toxicity. Also, convallatoxin was found to dramatically reduce the proliferation of clinical CMV strains, implying that its mechanism of action is an effective strategy to block CMV dissemination. Our study has uncovered the mechanism and structural elements of convallatoxin, which are important for effectively inhibiting CMV infection by targeting the expression of immediate-early genes.
Cytomegalovirus is a highly prevalent virus capable of causing severe disease in certain populations. The current FDA-approved therapeutics all target the same stage of the viral life cycle and induce toxicity and viral resistance. We identified convallatoxin, a novel cell-targeting antiviral that inhibits CMV infection by decreasing the synthesis of viral proteins. At doses low enough for cells to tolerate, convallatoxin was able to inhibit primary isolates of CMV, including those resistant to the anti-CMV drug ganciclovir. In addition to identifying convallatoxin as a novel antiviral, limiting mRNA translation has a dramatic impact on CMV infection and proliferation.
巨细胞病毒(CMV)是一种普遍存在的人类病原体,会增加免疫功能低下个体的发病率和死亡率。目前美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准的用于治疗CMV感染的药物旨在针对病毒,但它们具有显著的不良副作用,包括肾毒性和血液学毒性。因此,临床上需要更安全、更有效的CMV治疗药物。通过高内涵筛选,我们确定了强心苷铃兰毒苷是一种能抑制CMV感染的有效化合物。我们使用一组强心苷变体,通过实验和计算机模拟方法评估了对抗CMV活性至关重要的结构元件。对不同强心苷变体的抗病毒作用、毒性和药效学分析确定其抑制机制是减少蛋氨酸的摄取,导致即刻早期基因翻译减少,且无明显毒性。此外,还发现铃兰毒苷能显著降低临床CMV毒株的增殖,这意味着其作用机制是阻断CMV传播的有效策略。我们的研究揭示了铃兰毒苷的作用机制和结构元件,这些对于通过靶向即刻早期基因的表达有效抑制CMV感染非常重要。
巨细胞病毒是一种高度流行的病毒,能够在特定人群中引起严重疾病。目前FDA批准的治疗药物均针对病毒生命周期的同一阶段,会诱导毒性和病毒耐药性。我们确定了铃兰毒苷,一种新型的细胞靶向抗病毒药物,通过减少病毒蛋白的合成来抑制CMV感染。在细胞能够耐受的足够低剂量下,铃兰毒苷能够抑制CMV的原始分离株,包括那些对抗CMV药物更昔洛韦耐药的分离株。除了将铃兰毒苷确定为一种新型抗病毒药物外,限制mRNA翻译对CMV感染和增殖有显著影响。