A New Frontier within the Fight Against Emerging Diseases

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Researchers have found potential wide-ranging antiviral brokers that may fight a number of RNA virus households, together with those who could trigger future pandemics. The examine recognized a number of promising antivirals, with the simplest being cyclic dinucleotide (CDN) STING agonists, which have additionally proven potential in most cancers immunotherapy. One dose of a STING agonist named cAIMP was discovered to stop and alleviate viral arthritis brought on by the Chikungunya virus in a mouse mannequin, highlighting its therapeutic potential. Furthermore, STING agonists demonstrated broad-spectrum antiviral exercise in opposition to each arthropod-borne and respiratory viruses, together with SARS-CoV-2 and Enterovirus D68. The analysis staff’s future goal is to develop these antivirals along side current ones to organize for potential respiratory and arboviral illness outbreaks.

A UCLA study discovered potential broad-spectrum antiviral agents capable of combating various RNA virus families, including those causing future pandemics. Particularly effective were cyclic dinucleotide (CDN) STING agonists, which showed therapeutic promise against the Chikungunya virus and other arthropod-borne and respiratory viruses, including COVID-19. The aim is to develop these antivirals alongside existing ones for future disease outbreaks.

A new study has identified potential broad-spectrum antiviral agents that can target multiple families of RNA viruses that continue to pose a significant threat for future pandemics. The study, led by Gustavo Garcia Jr. in the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, tested a library of innate immune agonists that work by targeting pathogen recognition receptors, and found several agents that showed promise, including one that exhibited potent antiviral activity against members of RNA viral families.

The ongoing SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, which has claimed nearly seven million lives globally since it began, has revealed the vulnerabilities of human society to a large-scale outbreak from emerging pathogens. While accurately predicting what will trigger the next pandemic, the authors say recent epidemics as well as global climate change and the continuously evolving nature of the RNA genome indicate that arboviruses, viruses spread by arthropods such as mosquitoes, are prime candidates. These include Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), Dengue virus, West Nile virus, and Zika virus.

The researchers write: “Given their already-demonstrated epidemic potential, finding effective broad-spectrum treatments against these viruses is of the utmost importance as they become potential agents for pandemics.”

In their new study, published on April 28 in Cell Reports Medicine, researchers found that several antivirals inhibited these arboviruses to varying degrees. “The most potent and broad-spectrum antiviral agents identified in the study were cyclic dinucleotide (CDN) STING agonists, which also hold promise in triggering an immune defense against cancer,” said senior author Vaithi Arumugaswami, Associate Professor in the UCLA Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology.

“A robust host antiviral response induced by a single dose treatment of STING agonist cAIMP is effective in preventing and mitigating the debilitating viral arthritis caused by Chikungunya virus in a mouse model. This is a very promising treatment modality as Chikungunya virus-affected individuals suffer from viral arthritis years and decades from the initial infection,” Arumugaswami added.

“At molecular level, CHIKV contributes to robust transcriptional (and chemical) imbalances in infected skin cells (fibroblasts) compared to West Nile Virus and ZIKA Virus, reflecting a possible difference in the viral-mediated injury (disease pathogenesis) mechanisms by viruses belonging to different families despite all being mosquito-borne viruses,” said senior author Arunachalam Ramaiah, Senior Scientist in the City of Milwaukee Health Department.

“The study of transcriptional changes in host cells reveals that cAIMP treatment rescues (reverses) cells from the harmful effect of CHIKV-induced dysregulation of cell repair, immune, and metabolic pathways,” Ramaiah added.

The study concludes that the STING agonists exhibited broad-spectrum antiviral activity against both arthropod-borne- and respiratory viruses, including treaded SARS-CoV-2 and Enterovirus D68 in cell culture models.

Garcia notes, “The next step is to develop these broad-spectrum antivirals in combination with other existing antivirals and be made readily available in the event of future respiratory and arboviral disease outbreaks.”

Reference: “Innate immune pathway modulator screen identifies STING pathway activation as a strategy to inhibit multiple families of arbo and respiratory viruses” by Gustavo Garcia Jr., Joseph Ignatius Irudayam, Arjit Vijey Jeyachandran, Swati Dubey, Christina Chang, Sebastian Castillo Cario, Nate Price, Sathya Arumugam, Angelica L. Marquez, Aayushi Shah, Amir Fanaei, Nikhil Chakravarty, Shantanu Joshi, Sanjeev Sinha, Samuel W. French, Mark S. Parcells, Arunachalam Ramaiah and Vaithilingaraja Arumugaswami, 28 April 2023, Cell Reports Medicine.
DOI: 10.1016/j.xcrm.2023.101024

The study’s first author is Gustavo Garcia Jr., a (former) UCLA Staff Research Associate, and the co-first author is Joseph Ignatius Irudayam, a (former) UCLA Project Scientist. Corresponding authors are Vaithilingaraja Arumugaswami, a UCLA associate professor of molecular and medical pharmacology, a member of the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center, and a member of the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA, and Arunachalam Ramaiah of the City of Milwaukee Health Department. Other authors are Arjit Vijey Jeyachandran, Swati Dubey, Christina Chang, Sebastian Castillo Cario, Nate Price, Angelica L. Marquez, Aayushi Shah, Amir Fanaei, Nikhil Chakravarty, Shantanu Joshi, Samuel W. French, all of UCLA; Sathya Arumugam of Government College Daman, India; Sanjeev Sinha of All India Institute of Medical Sciences, India and Mark S. Parcells of University of Delaware.

This study is supported by National Institute of Health awards 1R01EY032149-01, 5R01AI163216-02 and 1R01DK132735-01 to Vaithi Arumugaswami.