Reynolds Daman, Huesemann Michael, Edmundson Scott, Sims Amy, Hurst Brett, Cady Sherry, Beirne Nathan, Freeman Jacob, Berger Adam, Gao Song
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Marine and Coastal Research Laboratory, Sequim, WA, USA.
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Chemical and Biological Signatures Group, Richland, WA, USA.
Algal Res. 2021 Jul;57:102331. doi: 10.1016/j.algal.2021.102331. Epub 2021 May 18.
Viruses are abiotic obligate parasites utilizing complex mechanisms to hijack cellular machinery and reproduce, causing multiple harmful effects in the process. Viruses represent a growing global health concern; at the time of writing, COVID-19 has killed at least two million people around the world and devastated global economies. Lingering concern regarding the virus' prevalence yet hampers return to normalcy. While catastrophic in and of itself, COVID-19 further heralds in a new era of human-disease interaction characterized by the emergence of novel viruses from natural sources with heretofore unseen frequency. Due to deforestation, population growth, and climate change, we are encountering more viruses that can infect larger groups of people with greater ease and increasingly severe outcomes. The devastation of COVID-19 and forecasts of future human/disease interactions call for a creative reconsideration of global response to infectious disease. There is an urgent need for accessible, cost-effective antiviral (AV) drugs that can be mass-produced and widely distributed to large populations. Development of AV drugs should be informed by a thorough understanding of viral structure and function as well as human biology. To maximize efficacy, minimize cost, and reduce development of drug-resistance, these drugs would ideally operate through a varied set of mechanisms at multiple stages throughout the course of infection. Due to their abundance and diversity, natural compounds are ideal for such comprehensive therapeutic interventions. Promising sources of such drugs are found throughout nature; especially remarkable are the algae, a polyphyletic grouping of phototrophs that produce diverse bioactive compounds. While not much literature has been published on the subject, studies have shown that these compounds exert antiviral effects at different stages of viral pathogenesis. In this review, we follow the course of viral infection in the human body and evaluate the AV effects of algae-derived compounds at each stage. Specifically, we examine the AV activities of algae-derived compounds at the entry of viruses into the body, transport through the body the lymph and blood, infection of target cells, and immune response. We discuss what is known about algae-derived compounds that may interfere with the infection pathways of SARS-CoV-2; and review which algae are promising sources for AV agents or AV precursors that, with further investigation, may yield life-saving drugs due to their diversity of mechanisms and exceptional pharmaceutical potential.
病毒是无生命的专性寄生虫,它们利用复杂机制劫持细胞机制并进行繁殖,在此过程中造成多种有害影响。病毒已成为全球日益严重的健康问题;在撰写本文时,新冠疫情已在全球造成至少两百万人死亡,并重创全球经济。对病毒传播的持续担忧仍然阻碍着恢复正常生活。新冠疫情本身虽然具有灾难性,但它进一步预示着人类与疾病相互作用的新时代的到来,其特征是新型病毒以前所未有的频率从自然源出现。由于森林砍伐、人口增长和气候变化,我们正在遇到更多能够更轻松地感染更多人群并导致越来越严重后果的病毒。新冠疫情的破坏以及对未来人类/疾病相互作用的预测,要求我们重新创造性地思考全球对传染病的应对措施。迫切需要可大规模生产并广泛分发给大量人群的、易于获取且具有成本效益的抗病毒药物。抗病毒药物的开发应以对病毒结构和功能以及人类生物学的透彻理解为依据。为了最大限度地提高疗效、降低成本并减少耐药性的产生,这些药物理想情况下应在感染过程的多个阶段通过多种机制发挥作用。由于天然化合物种类丰富且具有多样性,它们是进行此类全面治疗干预的理想选择。在自然界中可找到此类药物的有前景的来源;特别值得注意的是藻类,这是一类光合生物的多系类群,能产生多种生物活性化合物。虽然关于这个主题的文献不多,但研究表明这些化合物在病毒发病机制的不同阶段发挥抗病毒作用。在本综述中,我们追踪病毒在人体中的感染过程,并评估藻类衍生化合物在每个阶段的抗病毒效果。具体而言,我们研究藻类衍生化合物在病毒进入人体、通过淋巴和血液在体内运输、感染靶细胞以及免疫反应等阶段的抗病毒活性。我们讨论已知的可能干扰新冠病毒感染途径的藻类衍生化合物;并综述哪些藻类是抗病毒药物或抗病毒前体的有前景的来源,经过进一步研究,由于其作用机制的多样性和卓越的制药潜力,它们可能会产生挽救生命的药物。