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Inhibition of porcine deltacoronavirus entry and replication by Cepharanthine.

Authors :
Sun, Yumei
Liu, Zhongzhu
Shen, Shiyi
Zhang, Mengjia
Liu, Lina
Ghonaim, Ahmed H
Li, Yongtao
Zhang, Shujun
Li, Wentao
Source :
Virus Research. Feb2024, Vol. 340, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• CEP can significantly inhibits PDCoV binding, entry, and replication in LLC-PK1 cells. • In silico data and SPR results indicate that CEP targets pAPN and PDCoV binding sites in cells to inhibits PDCoV infection. • CEP reduces inflammatory signaling caused by PDCoV infection. • CEP inhibits PDCoV replication by inducing autophagy. • CEP confers broad-spectrum resistance to other coronaviruses (TGEV and MHV). Porcine deltacoronavirus (PDCoV) is an emerging swine enteropathogenic coronavirus (CoV) that mainly causes acute diarrhea/vomiting, dehydration, and mortality in piglets, possessing economic losses and public health concerns. However, there are currently no proven effective antiviral agents against PDCoV. Cepharanthine (CEP) is a naturally occurring alkaloid used as a traditional remedy for radiation-induced symptoms, but its underlying mechanism of CEP against PDCoV has remained elusive. The aim of this study was to investigate the anti-PDCoV effects and mechanisms of CEP in LLC-PK1 cells. The results showed that the antiviral activity of CEP was based on direct action on cells, preventing the virus from attaching to host cells and virus replication. Importantly, Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) results showed that CEP has a moderate affinity to PDCoV receptor, porcine aminopeptidase N (pAPN) protein. AutoDock predicted that CEP can form hydrogen bonds with amino acid residues (R740, N783, and R790) in the binding regions of PDCoV and pAPN. In addition, RT-PCR results showed that CEP treatment could significantly reduce the transcription of ZBP1, cytokine (IL-1β and IFN-α) and chemokine genes (CCL-2, CCL-4, CCL-5, CXCL-2, CXCL-8, and CXCL-10) induced by PDCoV. Western blot analysis revealed that CEP could inhibit viral replication by inducing autophagy. In conclusion, our results suggest that the anti-PDCoV activity of CEP is not only relies on competing the virus binding with pAPN, but also affects the proliferation of the virus in vitro by downregulating the excessive immune response caused by the virus and inducing autophagy. CEP emerges as a promising candidate for potential anti-PDCoV therapeutic development. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01681702
Volume :
340
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Virus Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174687686
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.virusres.2023.199303