posted on 2016-03-17, 18:41authored byKoji Ichiyama, Chuan Yang, Lakshmi Chandrasekaran, Shaoqiong Liu, Lijun Rong, Yue Zhao, Shujun Gao, Ashlynn Lee, Kenji Ohba, Youichi Suzuki, Yoshiyuki Yoshinaka, Kunitada Shimotohno, Kei Miyakawa, Akihide Ryo, James Hedrick, Naoki Yamamoto, Yi Yan Yang
Treatment of viral infections continues
to be elusive owing to
the variance in virus structure (RNA, DNA, and enveloped and nonenveloped
viruses) together with their ability to rapidly mutate and garner
resistance. Here we report a general strategy to prevent viral infection
using multifunctional macromolecules that were designed to have mannose
moieties that compete with viruses for immune cells, and basic amine
groups that block viral entry through electrostatic interactions and
prevent viral replication by neutralizing the endosomal pH. We showed
that cells treated with the antiviral polymers inhibited TIM receptors
from trafficking virus, likely from electrostatic and hydrogen-bonding
interactions, with EC50 values ranging from 2.6 to 6.8 mg/L, depending
on the type of TIM receptors. Molecular docking computations revealed
an unexpected, and general, specific hydrogen-bonding interactions
with viral surface proteins, and virus and cell binding assay demonstrated
a significant reduction in infection after incubating virus or cells
with the antiviral polymers. Moreover, the mannose-functionalized
macromolecules effectively prevented the virus from infecting the
immune cells. Representative viruses from each category including
dengue, influenza, Chikungunya, Enterovirus 71, Ebola, Marburg, and
herpes simplex were surveyed, and viral infection was effectively
prevented at polymer concentrations as low as 0.2 mg/L with very high
selectivity (>5000) over mammalian cells. The generality of these
cooperative orthogonal interactions (electrostatic and hydrogen-bonding)
provides broad-spectrum antiviral activity. As the antiviral mechanism
is based on nonspecific supramolecular interactions between the amino
acid residues and mannose/cationic moieties of the macromolecule,
the ability to form the virus–polymer and polymer−cell
assemblies can occur regardless of viral mutation, preventing drug
resistance development.