-
Assessment of flavaglines as potential chikungunya virus entry inhibitors
- Back
Metadata
Document Title
Assessment of flavaglines as potential chikungunya virus entry inhibitors
Author
Wintachai P, Thuaud F, Basmadjian C, Roytrakul S, Ubol S, Desaubry L, Smith DR
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Mahidol University; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - Institute of Chemistry (INC); UDICE-French Research Universities; Universites de Strasbourg Etablissements Associes; Universite de Strasbourg; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Center Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology (BIOTEC); Mahidol University; Mahidol University
Type
Article
Source Title
MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
Year
2015
Volume
59
Issue
3
Page
129-141
Open Access
Green Published
Publisher
WILEY
DOI
10.1111/1348-0421.12230
Format
Abstract
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a re-emerging mosquito-borne alphavirus that recently caused large epidemics in islands in, and countries around, the Indian Ocean. There is currently no specific drug for therapeutic treatment or for use as a prophylactic agent against infection and no commercially available vaccine. Prohibitin has been identified as a receptor protein used by chikungunya virus to enter mammalian cells. Recently, synthetic sulfonyl amidines and flavaglines (FLs), a class of naturally occurring plant compounds with potent anti-cancer and cytoprotective and neuroprotective activities, have been shown to interact directly with prohibitin. This study therefore sought to determine whether three prohibitin ligands (sulfonyl amidine 1m and the flavaglines FL3 and FL23) were able to inhibit CHIKV infection of mammalian Hek293T/17 cells. All three compounds inhibited infection and reduced virus production when cells were treated before infection but not when added after infection. Pretreatment of cells for only 15minutes prior to infection followed by washing out of the compound resulted in significant inhibition of entry and virus production. These results suggest that further investigation of prohibitin ligands as potential Chikungunya virus entry inhibitors is warranted.
Keyword
Chikungunya virus | Entry inhibitor | Flavaglines | Sulfonyl amidines
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
Funding Sponsor
Mahidol University; Office of the Higher Education Commission under the National Research Universities Initiative; Thailand Research Fund [IRG5780009]; Thailand Graduate Institute of Science and Technology (TGIST) PhD scholarship; AAREC Filia Research; MNESR
License
Copyright
Rights
The Societies and Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd
Publication Source
WOS