Abstract

After decades of being considered non-pathogenic, Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged as an important threat to human health during the epidemic of 2015–2016. ZIKV infections are usually asymptomatic, but can cause Guillain-Barré syndrome in adults and microcephaly in newborns. As there are currently no approved antiviral drugs against ZIKV, we tested anti-ZIKV activity of compounds from the NIH Clinical Collection for which we previously showed antiviral activity against the related dengue virus. One of the top hits from the screen was lacidipine, a 1,4-dihydropyridine calcium antagonist that is approved as an antihypertensive drug. Our data show that lacidipine is antiviral against ZIKV (strain H/PF/2013) in both Vero cells and induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived human neural progenitor cells with IC50 values of 3.0 μM and <50 nM, respectively. The antiviral effect was also observed against four other ZIKV strains from the African and Asian lineages. Time-of-addition and replicon assays indicated that lacidipine acts at the post-entry stage of the viral replication cycle, inhibiting viral genome replication. Lacidipine altered the subcellular distribution of free cholesterol and neutral lipids, suggesting that the antiviral effect of lacidipine is mediated by altered trafficking of lipids. Together, these results identify lacidipine as a novel inhibitor of ZIKV replication that likely disturbs trafficking of lipids needed for replication organelle formation.

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