4.6 Article

Acitretin and Retinoic Acid Derivatives Inhibit BK Polyomavirus Replication in Primary Human Proximal Renal Tubular Epithelial and Urothelial Cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 95, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00127-21

Keywords

BKPyV; BK virus; antiviral; acitretin; retinoic acid; large T antigen; antiviral agents; hemorrhagic cystitis; nephropathy

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Basel

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The study demonstrates that acitretin selectively inhibits BK polyomavirus replication in primary human cells, suggesting its potential use for treating BK polyomavirus-associated diseases such as nephropathy and hemorrhagic cystitis. Further research is needed to explore the clinical repurposing of retinoids for these conditions.
Small-molecule drugs inhibiting BK polyomavirus (BKPyV) represent a significant unmet clinical need in view of polyomavirus-associated nephropathy or hemorrhagic cystitis, which complicate 5% to 25% of kidney and hematopoietic cell transplantations. We characterized the inhibitory activity of acitretin on BKPyV replication in primary human renal proximal tubular epithelial cells (RPTECs). Effective inhibitory concentrations of 50% (EC50) and 90% (EC90) were determined in dilution series measuring BKPyV loads, transcripts, and protein expression, using cell proliferation, metabolic activity, and viability to estimate cytotoxic concentrations and selectivity indices (SI). The acitretin EC50 and EC90 in RPTECs were 0.64 (SI50, 250) and 3.25 mu M (SI90, 49.2), respectively. Acitretin effectively inhibited BKPyV replication until 72 h postinfection when added 24 h before infection until 12 h after infection, but decreased to <50% at later time points. Acitretin did not interfere with nuclear delivery of BKPyV genomes, but it decreased large T-antigen transcription and protein expression. Acitretin did not inhibit the initial round of BKPyV replication following transfection of full-length viral genomes, but it affected subsequent rounds of reinfection. Acitretin also inhibited BKPyV replication in human urothelial cells and in Vero cells, but not in COS-7 cells constitutively expressing Simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen. Retinoic acid agonists (all -trans retinoic acid, 9 -cis retinoic acid [9 -cis-RA], 13 -cis-RA, bexarotene, and tamibarotene) and the RAR/RXR antagonist RO41-5253 also inhibited BKPyV replication, pointing to an as-yet-undefined mechanism. IMPORTANCE Acitretin selectively inhibits BKPyV replication in primary human cell culture models of nephropathy and hemorrhagic cystitis. Since acitretin is an approved drug in clinical use reaching BKPyV-inhibiting concentrations in systemically treated patients, further studies are warranted to provide data for clinical repurposing of retinoids for treatment and prevention of replicative BKPyV-diseases.

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