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Enhancing the Antiviral Potency of Nucleobases for Potential Broad-Spectrum Antiviral Therapies

Authors :
Ruben Soto-Acosta
Tiffany C. Edwards
Christine D. Dreis
Venkatramana D. Krishna
Maxim C-J. Cheeran
Li Qiu
Jiashu Xie
Laurent F. Bonnac
Robert J. Geraghty
Source :
Viruses, Vol 13, Iss 2508, p 2508 (2021), Viruses, Viruses; Volume 13; Issue 12; Pages: 2508
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Broad-spectrum antiviral therapies hold promise as a first-line defense against emerging viruses by blunting illness severity and spread until vaccines and virus-specific antivirals are developed. The nucleobase favipiravir, often discussed as a broad-spectrum inhibitor, was not effective in recent clinical trials involving patients infected with Ebola virus or SARS-CoV-2. A drawback of favipiravir use is its rapid clearance before conversion to its active nucleoside-5′-triphosphate form. In this work, we report a synergistic reduction of flavivirus (dengue, Zika), orthomyxovirus (influenza A), and coronavirus (HCoV-OC43 and SARS-CoV-2) replication when the nucleobases favipiravir or T-1105 were combined with the antimetabolite 6-methylmercaptopurine riboside (6MMPr). The 6MMPr/T-1105 combination increased the C-U and G-A mutation frequency compared to treatment with T-1105 or 6MMPr alone. A further analysis revealed that the 6MMPr/T-1105 co-treatment reduced cellular purine nucleotide triphosphate synthesis and increased conversion of the antiviral nucleobase to its nucleoside-5′-monophosphate, -diphosphate, and -triphosphate forms. The 6MMPr co-treatment specifically increased production of the active antiviral form of the nucleobases (but not corresponding nucleosides) while also reducing levels of competing cellular NTPs to produce the synergistic effect. This in-depth work establishes a foundation for development of small molecules as possible co-treatments with nucleobases like favipiravir in response to emerging RNA virus infections.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994915
Volume :
13
Issue :
2508
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Viruses
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....95545485c9c3119c7615b9bf707d00e9