Abstract

To efficiently lower virus infectivity and combat virus epidemics or pandemics, it is important to discover broadly acting antivirals. Here, we investigated two naturally occurring polyphenols, Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) and Resveratrol (RES), and polyphenol-functionalized nanoparticles for their antiviral efficacy. Concentrations in the low micromolar range permanently inhibited the infectivity of high doses of enteroviruses (107 PFU/mL). Sucrose gradient separation of radiolabeled viruses, dynamic light scattering, transmission electron microscopic imaging and an in-house developed real-time fluorescence assay revealed that polyphenols prevented infection mainly through clustering of the virions into very stable assemblies. Clustering and stabilization were not compromised even in dilute virus solutions or after diluting the polyphenols-clustered virions by 50-fold. In addition, the polyphenols lowered virus binding on cells. In silico docking experiments of these molecules against 2- and 3-fold symmetry axes of the capsid, using an algorithm developed for this study, discovered five binding sites for polyphenols, out of which three were novel binding sites. Our results altogether suggest that polyphenols exert their antiviral effect through binding to multiple sites on the virion surface, leading to aggregation of the virions and preventing RNA release and reducing cell surface binding.

Highlights

  • The gold standard in viral disease management is prevention, which is vaccination.Pandemics with new viruses remind us that the development and approval of vaccines takes time

  • The cytopathic effect (CPE) analysis showed that Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG)

  • Our results showed that EGCG and RES have strong antiviral efficacy against the three enterovirus serotypes

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Summary

Introduction

The gold standard in viral disease management is prevention, which is vaccination.Pandemics with new viruses remind us that the development and approval of vaccines takes time. Non-enveloped enteroviruses are very stable and stay infective on surfaces and in the environment for long periods. Their entry is mostly via the gastro-intestinal tract, and through the upper respiratory system. They cause a high number of acute infections such as flu, aseptic meningitis and myocarditis, and contribute to chronic diseases such as dilated cardiomyopathy, asthma or type I diabetes [1]. No approved antivirals exist, and there are vaccines available only against poliovirus and EV71 [1]

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