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High-Throughput Screening of FDA-Approved Drug Library Reveals Ixazomib Is a Broad-Spectrum Antiviral Agent against Arboviruses.

Cuiling DingWanda TangBinghui XiaHaoran PengYan LiuJiaqi WangXu ZhengYangang LiuLanjuan ZhaoYanhua HeZhongtian QiHao RenHailin TangPing Zhao
Published in: Viruses (2022)
The emergence of significant arboviruses and their spillover transmission to humans represent a major threat to global public health. No approved drugs are available for the treatment of significant arboviruses in circulation today. The repurposing of clinically approved drugs is one of the most rapid and promising strategies in the identification of effective treatments for diseases caused by arboviruses. Here, we screened small-molecule compounds with anti-tick-borne encephalitis virus, West Nile virus, yellow fever virus and chikungunya virus activity from 2580 FDA-approved drugs. In total, 60 compounds showed antiviral efficacy against all four of the arboviruses in Huh7 cells. Among these compounds, ixazomib and ixazomib citrate (inhibitors of 20S proteasome β5) exerted antiviral effects at a low-micromolar concentration. The time-of-drug-addition assay suggested that ixazomib and ixazomib citrate disturbed multiple processes in viruses' life cycles. Furthermore, ixazomib and ixazomib citrate potently inhibited chikungunya virus replication and relieved virus-induced footpad swelling in a mouse model. These results offer critical information which supports the role of ixazomib as a broad-spectrum agent against arboviruses.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • small molecule
  • zika virus
  • drug administration
  • drug induced
  • emergency department
  • disease virus
  • aedes aegypti
  • high throughput
  • oxidative stress
  • high glucose
  • diabetic rats
  • replacement therapy