Identification of small-molecule inhibitors of Zika virus infection and induced neural cell death via a drug repurposing screen

Miao Xu(National Institutes of Health), Emily M. Lee(Florida State University), Zhexing Wen(Johns Hopkins University), Yichen Cheng(Florida State University), Wei-Kai Huang(National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences), Xuyu Qian(Johns Hopkins University), Julia TCW(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Jennifer Kouznetsova(National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences), Sarah C. Ogden(Florida State University), Christy Hammack(Florida State University), Fadi Jacob(Johns Hopkins Medicine), Ha Nguyen(Johns Hopkins University), Misha Itkin(National Institutes of Health), Catherine Hanna(Florida State University), Paul Shinn(National Institutes of Health), Chase A. Allen(Florida State University), Sam Michael(National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences), Anton Simeonov(National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences), Wenwei Huang(Johns Hopkins University), Kimberly M. Christian(Johns Hopkins University), Alison Goate(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Kristen Brennand(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Ruili Huang(National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences), Menghang Xia(National Institutes of Health), Guo‐li Ming(Johns Hopkins Medicine), Wei Zheng(National Institutes of Health), Hongjun Song(Johns Hopkins Medicine), Hengli Tang(Florida State University)
Nature Medicine
August 29, 2016
Cited by 669Open Access
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Abstract

In response to the current global health emergency posed by the Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak and its link to microcephaly and other neurological conditions, we performed a drug repurposing screen of ∼6,000 compounds that included approved drugs, clinical trial drug candidates and pharmacologically active compounds; we identified compounds that either inhibit ZIKV infection or suppress infection-induced caspase-3 activity in different neural cells. A pan-caspase inhibitor, emricasan, inhibited ZIKV-induced increases in caspase-3 activity and protected human cortical neural progenitors in both monolayer and three-dimensional organoid cultures. Ten structurally unrelated inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases inhibited ZIKV replication. Niclosamide, a category B anthelmintic drug approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, also inhibited ZIKV replication. Finally, combination treatments using one compound from each category (neuroprotective and antiviral) further increased protection of human neural progenitors and astrocytes from ZIKV-induced cell death. Our results demonstrate the efficacy of this screening strategy and identify lead compounds for anti-ZIKV drug development.


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