4.7 Article

Repurposing of the antihistamine mebhydrolin napadisylate for treatment of Zika virus infection

Journal

BIOORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 128, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioorg.2022.106024

Keywords

Zika Virus; Antihistamine drugs; Anti-virus; RNA-dependent RNA polymerase; Antiviral agents

Funding

  1. National Infrastructure of Microbial Resources (China) [NIMR-2014-3]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81971950]
  3. CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences [2021-I2M-1-038]

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This study screened FDA-approved antihistamine drugs and identified mebhydrolin napadisylate (MHL) as a potent inhibitor of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection. The mechanism of action involves MHL inhibiting the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) activity of ZIKV. Molecular docking analysis also suggests that MHL interacts with key residues at the active site of ZIKV NS5 RdRp. These findings highlight the potential of MHL as a promising clinical therapeutic for ZIKV.
Zika virus (ZIKV) infection can lead to severe neurological disorders and fetal defects, which has become a public health problem worldwide. However, effective clinical treatment for ZIKV infection was still arduous. Antihistamines are attractive candidates for drug repurposing due to their low price and widespread availability. Here we screened FDA-approved antihistamine drugs to obtain anti-ZIKV candidate compounds and identified mebhydrolin napadisylate (MHL) that exhibits the potent inhibition of ZIKV infection in various cell lines in a histamine H1 receptor-independent manner. Mechanistic studies suggest that MHL acts as a ZIKV NS5 RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) inhibitor, supported by a structure-activity relationship (SAR) analysis showing the correlation between the inhibitory effect upon viral RNA synthesis and ZIKV infectivity. Furthermore, MHL was shown to bind ZIKV NS5 RdRp in vitro and predicted to interact with key residues at the active site of ZIKV NS5 RdRp by molecular docking analysis. Our data together suggest that MHL suppresses ZIKV infection through the inhibition of ZIKV NS5 RdRp activity. This study highlights that MHL might be a promising clinical anti-ZIKV therapeutic.

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