Repurposing of Antazoline Hydrochloride as an Inhibitor of Hepatitis B Virus DNA Secretion.
Jing LiYangyang HuYifei YuanYinan ZhaoQiqi HanCanyu LiuXue HuYuan ZhouYun WangYu GuoChunchen WuXinwen ChenRongjuan PeiPublished in: Virologica Sinica (2020)
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) belongs to Hepadnaviridae family and mainly infects hepatocytes, which can cause acute or chronic hepatitis. Currently, two types of antiviral drugs are approved for chronic infection clinically: interferons and nucleos(t)ide analogues. However, the clinical cure for chronic infection is still rare, and it is a huge challenge for all researchers to develop high-efficiency, safe, non-tolerant, and low-toxicity anti-HBV drugs. Antazoline hydrochloride is a first-generation antihistamine with anticholinergic properties, and it is commonly used to relieve nasal congestion and in eye drops. Recently, an in vitro high-throughput evaluation system was constructed to screen nearly 800 compounds from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved Drug Library. We found that arbidol hydrochloride and antazoline hydrochloride can effectively reduce HBV DNA in the extracellular supernatant in a dose-dependent manner, with EC50 of 4.321 μmol/L and 2.910 μmol/L in HepAD38 cells, respectively. Moreover, the antiviral effects and potential mechanism of action of antazoline hydrochloride were studied in different HBV replication systems. The results indicate that antazoline hydrochloride also has a significant inhibitory effect on HBV DNA in the extracellular supernatant of Huh7 cells, with an EC50 of 2.349 μmol/L. These findings provide new ideas for screening and research related to HBV agents.
Keyphrases
- hepatitis b virus
- liver failure
- cell free
- drug administration
- high throughput
- drug induced
- induced apoptosis
- circulating tumor
- liver injury
- high efficiency
- cell cycle arrest
- single molecule
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- emergency department
- wastewater treatment
- single cell
- nucleic acid
- chronic rhinosinusitis