Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.
Department of Medicinal Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.
Microbiol Spectr. 2024 Apr 2;12(4):e0309823. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.03098-23. Epub 2024 Feb 26.
Ebola virus (EBOV) infection is threatening human health, especially in Central and West Africa. Limited clinical trials and the requirement of biosafety level-4 laboratories hinder experimental work to advance our understanding of EBOV and the evaluation of treatment. In this work, we use a computational model to study the assembly and budding process of EBOV and evaluate the effect of fendiline on these processes in the context of fluctuating host membrane lipid levels. Our results demonstrate for the first time that the assembly of VP40 filaments may follow the nucleation-elongation theory, as this mechanism is critical to maintaining a pool of VP40 dimers for the maturation and production of virus-like particles (VLPs). We further find that this nucleation-elongation process is likely influenced by fluctuating phosphatidylserine (PS), which can complicate the efficacy of lipid-targeted therapies like fendiline, a drug that lowers cellular PS levels. Our results indicate that fendiline-induced PS reduction may actually increase VLP production at earlier time points (24 h) and under low fendiline concentrations (≤2 µM). However, this effect is transient and does not change the conclusion that fendiline generally decreases VLP production. In the context of fluctuating PS levels, we also conclude that fendiline can be more efficient at the late stage of VLP budding relative to earlier phases. Combination therapy with a VLP budding step-targeted drug may therefore further increase the treatment efficiency of fendiline. Finally, we also show that fendiline-induced PS reduction more effectively lowers VLP production when VP40 expression is high. Taken together, our results provide critical quantitative information on how fluctuating lipid levels (PS) affect EBOV assembly and egress and how this mechanism can be disrupted by lipid-targeting molecules like fendiline.
Ebola virus (EBOV) infection can cause deadly hemorrhagic fever, which has a mortality rate of ~50%-90% without treatment. The recent outbreaks in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo illustrate its threat to human health. Though two antibody-based treatments were approved, mortality rates in the last outbreak were still higher than 30%. This can partly be due to the requirement of advanced medical facilities for current treatments. As a result, it is very important to develop and evaluate new therapies for EBOV infection, especially those that can be easily applied in the developing world. The significance of our research is that we evaluate the potential of lipid-targeted treatments in reducing EBOV assembly and egress. We achieved this goal using the VP40 system combined with a computational approach, which both saves time and lowers cost compared to traditional experimental studies and provides innovative new tools to study viral protein dynamics.
埃博拉病毒(EBOV)感染可导致致命性出血热,如未经治疗,死亡率约为 50%-90%。乌干达和刚果民主共和国最近的暴发事件表明了其对人类健康的威胁。尽管已批准了两种基于抗体的治疗方法,但上一次暴发的死亡率仍高于 30%。部分原因可能是由于目前的治疗方法需要先进的医疗设施。因此,开发和评估埃博拉病毒感染的新疗法非常重要,特别是那些在发展中国家易于应用的疗法。我们研究的意义在于,我们评估了靶向脂质治疗在减少埃博拉病毒组装和出芽中的潜力。我们通过 VP40 系统结合计算方法实现了这一目标,与传统的实验研究相比,这既节省了时间又降低了成本,并为研究病毒蛋白动力学提供了创新的新工具。