Anti-HIV-1 activity of low molecular weight sulfated chitooligosaccharides |
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Authors: | Murat Artan Mustafa Zafer Karagozlu Se-Kwon Kim |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Chemistry, Pukyong National University, Busan 608-737, Republic of Korea b Department of Chemistry, Dong-eui University, Busan 614-714, Republic of Korea c Marine Bioprocess Research Center, Pukyong National University, Busan 608-737, Republic of Korea |
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Abstract: | ![]() Chitooligosaccharides are nontoxic and water-soluble compounds obtained by enzymatic degradation of chitosan, which is derived from chitin by a deacetylation process. Chitooligosaccharides possess broad range of activities such as antitumour, antifungal, antibacterial activities. Sulfated chitooligosaccharides (SCOSs) with different molecular weights were synthesized by a random sulfation reaction. In the present study, anti-HIV-1 properties of SCOSs and the impact of molecular weight on their inhibitory activity were investigated. SCOS III (MW 3-5 kDa) was found to be the most effective compound to inhibit HIV-1 replication. At nontoxic concentrations, SCOS III exhibited remarkable inhibitory activities on HIV-1-induced syncytia formation (EC50 2.19 μg/ml), lytic effect (EC50 1.43 μg/ml), and p24 antigen production (EC50 4.33 μg/ml and 7.76 μg/ml for HIV-1RF and HIV-1Ba-L, respectively). In contrast, unsulfated chitooligosaccharides showed no activity against HIV-1. Furthermore, it was found that SCOS III blocked viral entry and virus-cell fusion probably via disrupting the binding of HIV-1 gp120 to CD4 cell surface receptor. These results suggest that sulfated chitooligosaccharides represent novel candidates for the development of anti-HIV-1 agent. |
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Keywords: | Anti-HIV-1 Sulfated chitooligosaccharide gp120 |
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