Sodium phenylbutyrate abrogates African swine fever virus replication by disrupting the virus-induced hypoacetylation status of histone H3K9/K14
Autor: | Fernando Ferreira, Gonçalo Frouco, Ferdinando B. Freitas, Carlos Martins |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Cancer Research Biology Virus Replication Antiviral Agents Phenylbutyrate African swine fever virus Virus Histones 03 medical and health sciences Histone H3 Virology Chlorocebus aethiops medicine Animals Vero Cells Vorinostat Acetylation Sodium phenylbutyrate biology.organism_classification African Swine Fever Virus Phenylbutyrates Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors 030104 developmental biology Infectious Diseases Trichostatin A Viral replication Protein Processing Post-Translational medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Virus Research. 242:24-29 |
ISSN: | 0168-1702 |
Popis: | African swine fever virus (ASFV) causes a highly lethal disease in swine for which neither a vaccine nor treatment are available. Recently, a new class of drugs that inhibit histone deacetylases enzymes (HDACs) has received an increasing interest as antiviral agents. Considering studies by others showing that valproic acid, an HDAC inhibitor (HDACi), blocks the replication of enveloped viruses and that ASFV regulates the epigenetic status of the host cell by promoting heterochromatinization and recruitment of class I HDACs to viral cytoplasmic factories, the antiviral activity of four HDACi against ASFV was evaluated in this study. Results showed that the sodium phenylbutyrate fully abrogates the ASFV replication, whereas the valproic acid leads to a significant reduction of viral progeny at 48h post-infection (-73.9%, p=0.046), as the two pan-HDAC inhibitors tested (Trichostatin A: -82.2%, p=0.043; Vorinostat: 73.9%, p=0.043). Further evaluation showed that protective effects of NaPB are dose-dependent, interfering with the expression of late viral genes and reversing the ASFV-induced histone H3 lysine 9 and 14 (H3K9K14) hypoacetylation status, compatible to an open chromatin state and possibly enabling the expression of host genes non-beneficial to infection progression. Additionally, a synergic antiviral effect was detected when NaPB is combined with an ASFV-topoisomerase II poison (Enrofloxacin). Altogether, our results strongly suggest that cellular HDACs are involved in the establishment of ASFV infection and emphasize that further in vivo studies are needed to better understand the antiviral activity of HDAC inhibitors. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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