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The proton translocation domain of cellular vacuolar ATPase provides a target for the treatment of influenza A virus infections.

Authors :
Müller, Konstantin H
Kainov, Denis E
El Bakkouri, Karim
Saelens, Xavier
De Brabander, Jef K
Kittel, Christian
Samm, Elisabeth
Muller, Claude P
Müller, Konstantin H
Source :
British Journal of Pharmacology; Sep2011, Vol. 164 Issue 2, p344-357, 14p
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

<bold>Background and Purpose: </bold>Cellular vacuolar ATPases (v-ATPase) play an important role in endosomal acidification, a critical step in influenza A virus (IAV) host cell infection. We investigated the antiviral activity of the v-ATPase inhibitor saliphenylhalamide (SaliPhe) and compared it with several older v-ATPase inhibitors concanamycin A, bafilomycin A1, (BafA) and archazolid B targeting the subunit c of the V(0) sector.<bold>Experimental Approach: </bold>An in vitro assay was devised to quantify the anti-influenza effect of v-ATPase inhibitors by measuring green fluorescent protein fluorescence of a reporter IAV. These data were combined with cytotoxicity testing to calculate selectivity indices. Data were validated by testing v-ATPase inhibitors against wild-type IAV in vitro and in vivo in mice.<bold>Key Results: </bold>In vitro SaliPhe blocked the proliferation of pandemic and multidrug resistant viruses at concentrations up to 51-fold below its cytotoxic concentrations. At essentially non-toxic concentrations, SaliPhe protected 62.5% of mice against a lethal challenge of a mouse-adapted influenza strain, while BafA at cytotoxic concentrations showed essentially no protection against infection with IAV (SaliPhe vs. BafA P < 0.001).<bold>Conclusions and Implications: </bold>Our results show that a distinct binding site of the proton translocation domain of cellular v-ATPase can be selectively targeted by a new generation v-ATPase inhibitor with reduced toxicity to treat influenza virus infections, including multi-resistant strains. Treatment strategies against influenza that target host cellular proteins are expected to be more resistant to virus mutations than drugs blocking viral proteins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071188
Volume :
164
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
British Journal of Pharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
67057467
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.2011.01346.x