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Mechanism of Inhibition of Enveloped Virus Membrane Fusion by the Antiviral Drug Arbidol

The broad-spectrum antiviral arbidol (Arb) inhibits cell entry of enveloped viruses by blocking viral fusion with host cell membrane. To better understand Arb mechanism of action, we investigated its interactions with phospholipids and membrane peptides. We demonstrate that Arb associates with phosp...

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Autores principales: Teissier, Elodie, Zandomeneghi, Giorgia, Loquet, Antoine, Lavillette, Dimitri, Lavergne, Jean-Pierre, Montserret, Roland, Cosset, François-Loïc, Böckmann, Anja, Meier, Beat H., Penin, François, Pécheur, Eve-Isabelle
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3026800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21283579
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015874
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author Teissier, Elodie
Zandomeneghi, Giorgia
Loquet, Antoine
Lavillette, Dimitri
Lavergne, Jean-Pierre
Montserret, Roland
Cosset, François-Loïc
Böckmann, Anja
Meier, Beat H.
Penin, François
Pécheur, Eve-Isabelle
author_facet Teissier, Elodie
Zandomeneghi, Giorgia
Loquet, Antoine
Lavillette, Dimitri
Lavergne, Jean-Pierre
Montserret, Roland
Cosset, François-Loïc
Böckmann, Anja
Meier, Beat H.
Penin, François
Pécheur, Eve-Isabelle
author_sort Teissier, Elodie
collection PubMed
description The broad-spectrum antiviral arbidol (Arb) inhibits cell entry of enveloped viruses by blocking viral fusion with host cell membrane. To better understand Arb mechanism of action, we investigated its interactions with phospholipids and membrane peptides. We demonstrate that Arb associates with phospholipids in the micromolar range. NMR reveals that Arb interacts with the polar head-group of phospholipid at the membrane interface. Fluorescence studies of interactions between Arb and either tryptophan derivatives or membrane peptides reconstituted into liposomes show that Arb interacts with tryptophan in the micromolar range. Interestingly, apparent binding affinities between lipids and tryptophan residues are comparable with those of Arb IC50 of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) membrane fusion. Since tryptophan residues of membrane proteins are known to bind preferentially at the membrane interface, these data suggest that Arb could increase the strength of virus glycoprotein's interactions with the membrane, due to a dual binding mode involving aromatic residues and phospholipids. The resulting complexation would inhibit the expected viral glycoprotein conformational changes required during the fusion process. Our findings pave the way towards the design of new drugs exhibiting Arb-like interfacial membrane binding properties to inhibit early steps of virus entry, i.e., attractive targets to combat viral infection.
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spelling pubmed-30268002011-01-31 Mechanism of Inhibition of Enveloped Virus Membrane Fusion by the Antiviral Drug Arbidol Teissier, Elodie Zandomeneghi, Giorgia Loquet, Antoine Lavillette, Dimitri Lavergne, Jean-Pierre Montserret, Roland Cosset, François-Loïc Böckmann, Anja Meier, Beat H. Penin, François Pécheur, Eve-Isabelle PLoS One Research Article The broad-spectrum antiviral arbidol (Arb) inhibits cell entry of enveloped viruses by blocking viral fusion with host cell membrane. To better understand Arb mechanism of action, we investigated its interactions with phospholipids and membrane peptides. We demonstrate that Arb associates with phospholipids in the micromolar range. NMR reveals that Arb interacts with the polar head-group of phospholipid at the membrane interface. Fluorescence studies of interactions between Arb and either tryptophan derivatives or membrane peptides reconstituted into liposomes show that Arb interacts with tryptophan in the micromolar range. Interestingly, apparent binding affinities between lipids and tryptophan residues are comparable with those of Arb IC50 of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) membrane fusion. Since tryptophan residues of membrane proteins are known to bind preferentially at the membrane interface, these data suggest that Arb could increase the strength of virus glycoprotein's interactions with the membrane, due to a dual binding mode involving aromatic residues and phospholipids. The resulting complexation would inhibit the expected viral glycoprotein conformational changes required during the fusion process. Our findings pave the way towards the design of new drugs exhibiting Arb-like interfacial membrane binding properties to inhibit early steps of virus entry, i.e., attractive targets to combat viral infection. Public Library of Science 2011-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3026800/ /pubmed/21283579 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015874 Text en Teissier et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Teissier, Elodie
Zandomeneghi, Giorgia
Loquet, Antoine
Lavillette, Dimitri
Lavergne, Jean-Pierre
Montserret, Roland
Cosset, François-Loïc
Böckmann, Anja
Meier, Beat H.
Penin, François
Pécheur, Eve-Isabelle
Mechanism of Inhibition of Enveloped Virus Membrane Fusion by the Antiviral Drug Arbidol
title Mechanism of Inhibition of Enveloped Virus Membrane Fusion by the Antiviral Drug Arbidol
title_full Mechanism of Inhibition of Enveloped Virus Membrane Fusion by the Antiviral Drug Arbidol
title_fullStr Mechanism of Inhibition of Enveloped Virus Membrane Fusion by the Antiviral Drug Arbidol
title_full_unstemmed Mechanism of Inhibition of Enveloped Virus Membrane Fusion by the Antiviral Drug Arbidol
title_short Mechanism of Inhibition of Enveloped Virus Membrane Fusion by the Antiviral Drug Arbidol
title_sort mechanism of inhibition of enveloped virus membrane fusion by the antiviral drug arbidol
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3026800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21283579
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015874
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