The Microtubule Inhibitor Podofilox Inhibits an Early Entry Step of Human Cytomegalovirus. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Human cytomegalovirus is a ubiquitous β-herpesvirus that infects many different cell types through an initial binding to cell surface receptors followed by a fusion event at the cell membrane or endocytic vesicle. A recent high-throughput screen to identify compounds that block a step prior to viral gene expression identified podofilox as a potent and nontoxic inhibitor. Time-of-addition studies in combination with quantitative-PCR analysis demonstrated that podofilox limits an early step of virus entry at the cell surface. Podofilox was also able to drastically reduce infection by herpes simplex 1, an α-herpesvirus with a very similar entry process to CMV. Podofilox caused a reduced maximal plateau inhibition of infection by viruses with single step binding processes prior to fusion-like Newcastle disease virus, Sendai virus, and influenza A virus or viruses that enter via endocytosis like vesicular stomatitis virus and a clinical-like strain of CMV. These results indicate that microtubules appear to be participating in the post-binding step of virus entry including the pre- and post-penetration events. Modulation of the plasma membrane is required to promote virus entry for herpesviruses, and that podofilox, unlike colchicine or nocodazole, is able to preferentially target microtubule networks at the plasma membrane.

authors

  • Cohen, Tobias
  • Schwarz, Toni M
  • Vigant, Frederic
  • Gardner, Thomas J
  • Hernandez, Rosmel E
  • Lee, Benhur
  • Tortorella, Domenico

publication date

  • October 24, 2016

Research

keywords

  • Antiviral Agents
  • Cytomegalovirus
  • Podophyllotoxin
  • Tubulin Modulators
  • Virus Internalization

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC5086627

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84992691627

PubMed ID

  • 27783035

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 8

issue

  • 10