Virucidal activity of a scorpion venom peptide variant mucroporin-M1 against measles, SARS-CoV and influenza H5N1 viruses |
| |
Authors: | Li Qiaoli Zhao Zhenhuan Zhou Dihan Chen Yaoqing Hong Wei Cao Luyang Yang Jingyi Zhang Yan Shi Wei Cao Zhijian Wu Yingliang Yan Huimin Li Wenxin |
| |
Affiliation: | a State Key Laboratory of Virology, College of Life Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, People's Republic of China b State Key Laboratory of Virology, Wuhan Institute of Virology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430071, People's Republic of China |
| |
Abstract: | Outbreaks of SARS-CoV, influenza A (H5N1, H1N1) and measles viruses in recent years have raised serious concerns about the measures available to control emerging and re-emerging infectious viral diseases. Effective antiviral agents are lacking that specifically target RNA viruses such as measles, SARS-CoV and influenza H5N1 viruses, and available vaccinations have demonstrated variable efficacy. Therefore, the development of novel antiviral agents is needed to close the vaccination gap and silence outbreaks. We previously indentified mucroporin, a cationic host defense peptide from scorpion venom, which can effectively inhibit standard bacteria. The optimized mucroporin-M1 can inhibit gram-positive bacteria at low concentrations and antibiotic-resistant pathogens. In this investigation, we further tested mucroporin and the optimized mucroporin-M1 for their antiviral activity. Surprisingly, we found that the antiviral activities of mucroporin-M1 against measles, SARS-CoV and influenza H5N1 viruses were notably increased with an EC50 of 7.15 μg/ml (3.52 μM) and a CC50 of 70.46 μg/ml (34.70 μM) against measles virus, an EC50 of 14.46 μg/ml (7.12 μM) against SARS-CoV and an EC50 of 2.10 μg/ml (1.03 μM) against H5N1, while the original peptide mucroporin showed no antiviral activity against any of these three viruses. The inhibition model could be via a direct interaction with the virus envelope, thereby decreasing the infectivity of virus. This report provides evidence that host defense peptides from scorpion venom can be modified for antiviral activity by rational design and represents a practical approach for developing broad-spectrum antiviral agents, especially against RNA viruses. |
| |
Keywords: | Mucroporin-M1 Scorpion venom Measles SARS-CoV H5N1 Antiviral |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|