Litcius/Paper detail

Antiviral Activity of Peptide-Based Assemblies

Tan H, Omer Agazani, Sivan Nir, Mor Cohen, Siyi Pan, Meital Reches

2021ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces19 citationsDOI

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of developing surfaces and coatings with antiviral activity. Here, we present, for the first time, peptide-based assemblies that can kill viruses. The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the assemblies is in the range tens of micrograms per milliliter. This value is 2 orders of magnitude smaller than the MIC of metal nanoparticles. When applied on a surface, by drop casting, the peptide spherical assemblies adhere to the surface and form an antiviral coating against both RNA- and DNA-based viruses including coronavirus. Our results show that the coating reduced the number of T4 bacteriophages (DNA-based virus) by 3 log, compared with an untreated surface and 6 log, when compared with a stock solution. Importantly, we showed that this coating completely inactivated canine coronavirus (RNA-based virus). This peptide-based coating can be useful wherever sterile surfaces are needed to reduce the risk of viral transmission.

Topics & Concepts

PeptideMaterials scienceCoatingVirologyRNACoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)CoronavirusNanoparticleVirusDrop (telecommunication)NanotechnologyBiologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)BiochemistryMedicineDiseaseTelecommunicationsPathologyGeneComputer scienceSupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsAntimicrobial Peptides and ActivitiesAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques