α病毒
病毒学
委内瑞拉马脑炎病毒
生物
蟾蜍科
辛德比斯病毒
病毒复制
抗病毒药物
病毒
基孔肯雅
甲病毒感染
溶瘤病毒
维罗细胞
生物化学
核糖核酸
基因
作者
Lindsay Lundberg,Ashwini Brahms,Idris Hooper,Kylene Kehn-Hall,Shih-Chao Lin,Bibha Dahal,Aarthi Narayanan
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.antiviral.2018.07.005
摘要
The New World alphaviruses -Venezuelan, eastern, and western equine encephalitis viruses (VEEV, EEEV, and WEEV respectively) - cause a febrile disease that is often lethal in equines and children and leads to long-term neurological sequelae in survivors. Endemic to the Americas, epizootic outbreaks of the three viruses occur sporadically in the continental United States. All three viruses aerosolize readily, replicate to high titers in cell culture, and have low infectious doses. Additionally, there are no FDA-approved vaccines or therapeutics for human use. To address the therapeutic gap, a high throughput assay utilizing a luciferase reporter virus, TC83-luc, was performed to screen a library of commercially available, FDA-approved drugs for antiviral activity. From a group of twenty compounds found to significantly decrease luminescence, the carcinoma therapeutic sorafenib inhibited replication of VEEV-TC83 and TrD in vitro. Additionally, sorafenib inhibited replication of EEEV and two Old World alphaviruses, Sindbis virus and chikungunya virus, at 8 and 16 h post-infection. Sorafenib caused no toxicity in Vero cells, and coupled with a low EC50 value, yielded a selectivity index of >19. Mechanism of actions studies suggest that sorafenib inhibited viral translation through dephosphorylation of several key proteins, including eIF4E and p70S6K, leading to a reduction in viral protein production and overall viral replication.
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