4.8 Article

Anticancer kinase inhibitors impair intracellular viral trafficking and exert broad-spectrum antiviral effects

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 127, Issue 4, Pages 1338-1352

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI89857

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) [1U19 AI10966201]
  2. NIAID [U19 AI083019]
  3. American Cancer Society [RSG-14-110-01-MPC]
  4. Stanford Bio-X
  5. Stanford SPARK program
  6. Stanford Translational Research and Applied Medicine program
  7. Doris Duke Charitable Foundation [2013100]
  8. Department of Defense office of the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs [PR151090]
  9. Child Health Research Institute
  10. Lucile Packard Foundation for Children's Health
  11. Stanford Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) [UL1 TR000093]
  12. Taiwan Ministry of Science and Technology [103-2917-I-564-033]
  13. Joint Science and Technology Office-Defense Threat Reduction Agency [CB3958]
  14. CTSA [UL1 TR001085]

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Global health is threatened by emerging viral infections, which largely lack effective vaccines or therapies. Targeting host pathways that are exploited by multiple viruses could offer broad-spectrum solutions. We previously reported that AAK1 and GAK, kinase regulators of the host adaptor proteins AP1 and AP2, are essential for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, but the underlying mechanism and relevance to other viruses or in vivo infections remained unknown. Here, we have discovered that AP1 and AP2 cotraffic with HCV particles in live cells. Moreover, we found that multiple viruses, including dengue and Ebola, exploit AAK1 and GAK during entry and infectious virus production. In cultured cells, treatment with sunitinib and erlotinib, approved anticancer drugs that inhibit AAK1 or GAK activity, or with more selective compounds inhibited intracellular trafficking of HCV and multiple unrelated RNA viruses with a high barrier to resistance. In murine models of dengue and Ebola infection, sunitinib/erlotinib combination protected against morbidity and mortality. We validated sunitinib-and erlotinib-mediated inhibition of AAK1 and GAK activity as an important mechanism of antiviral action. Additionally, we revealed potential roles for additional kinase targets. These findings advance our understanding of virus-host interactions and establish a proof of principle for a repurposed, host-targeted approach to combat emerging viruses.

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