4.6 Review

Rhinovirus Inhibitors: Including a New Target, the Viral RNA

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13091784

Keywords

picornavirus; enterovirus; rhinovirus; viral RNA structure; pyridostatin; G-quadruplex; anti-viral; drug candidate; uncoating; inhibition

Categories

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P27444, P31392]
  2. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P27444, P31392] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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Rhinoviruses are the main cause of mild cold symptoms but can be life-threatening in certain situations. Challenges remain in vaccination and antiviral development, leading to a focus on research into viral proteins, cellular enzymes, and the viral RNA genome as potential drug targets to combat infections.
Rhinoviruses (RVs) are the main cause of recurrent infections with rather mild symptoms characteristic of the common cold. Nevertheless, RVs give rise to enormous numbers of absences from work and school and may become life-threatening in particular settings. Vaccination is jeopardised by the large number of serotypes eliciting only poorly cross-neutralising antibodies. Conversely, antivirals developed over the years failed FDA approval because of a low efficacy and/or side effects. RV species A, B, and C are now included in the fifteen species of the genus Enteroviruses based upon the high similarity of their genome sequences. As a result of their comparably low pathogenicity, RVs have become a handy model for other, more dangerous members of this genus, e.g., poliovirus and enterovirus 71. We provide a short overview of viral proteins that are considered potential drug targets and their corresponding drug candidates. We briefly mention more recently identified cellular enzymes whose inhibition impacts on RVs and comment novel approaches to interfere with infection via aggregation, virus trapping, or preventing viral access to the cell receptor. Finally, we devote a large part of this article to adding the viral RNA genome to the list of potential drug targets by dwelling on its structure, folding, and the still debated way of its exit from the capsid. Finally, we discuss the recent finding that G-quadruplex stabilising compounds impact on RNA egress possibly via obfuscating the unravelling of stable secondary structural elements.

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