4.6 Article

Rocaglates as Antivirals: Comparing the Effects on Viral Resistance, Anti-Coronaviral Activity, RNA-Clamping on eIF4A and Immune Cell Toxicity

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14030519

Keywords

rocaglates; coronavirus; eIF4A; silvestrol; CR-1-31-B; zotatifin; escape mutations; broad-spectrum antivirals

Categories

Funding

  1. LOEWE Center DRUID
  2. German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), partner site Giessen-Marburg-Langen (TTU Emerging Infections)
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 1021, KFO309, GRK2581]
  4. German Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF)
  5. BMBF project HELIATAR
  6. von Behring-Roentgen Foundation
  7. NCI Cancer Center Support Grant (CCSG) [P30 CA08748]
  8. Starr Cancer Consortium [GC230724]
  9. NIH [RO1CA183876-05, RO1CA207217-03, R35 CA252982-01, P50 CA192937-03, P50 CA217694, LLS 7014-17, LLS 1318-15]

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Rocaglates are a class of broad-spectrum antiviral compounds that inhibit viral protein synthesis for different RNA viruses. They have differences in cytotoxicity against human immune cells, RNA-clamping efficiency, and antiviral activity. The results suggest that they have the potential to be effective antiviral drugs and are unlikely to lead to the emergence of viral escape mutations.
Rocaglates are potent broad-spectrum antiviral compounds with a promising safety profile. They inhibit viral protein synthesis for different RNA viruses by clamping the 5 '-UTRs of mRNAs onto the surface of the RNA helicase eIF4A. Apart from the natural rocaglate silvestrol, synthetic rocaglates like zotatifin or CR-1-31-B have been developed. Here, we compared the effects of rocaglates on viral 5 '-UTR-mediated reporter gene expression and binding to an eIF4A-polypurine complex. Furthermore, we analyzed the cytotoxicity of rocaglates on several human immune cells and compared their antiviral activities in coronavirus-infected cells. Finally, the potential for developing viral resistance was evaluated by passaging human coronavirus 229E (HCoV-229E) in the presence of increasing concentrations of rocaglates in MRC-5 cells. Importantly, no decrease in rocaglate-sensitivity was observed, suggesting that virus escape mutants are unlikely to emerge if the host factor eIF4A is targeted. In summary, all three rocaglates are promising antivirals with differences in cytotoxicity against human immune cells, RNA-clamping efficiency, and antiviral activity. In detail, zotatifin showed reduced RNA-clamping efficiency and antiviral activity compared to silvestrol and CR-1-31-B, but was less cytotoxic for immune cells. Our results underline the potential of rocaglates as broad-spectrum antivirals with no indications for the emergence of escape mutations in HCoV-229E.

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