Discovery of a Novel Respiratory Syncytial Virus Replication Inhibitor
Li Wang, Qihui Zhu, Kunlun Xiang, Yaling Zhang, Baocun Li, Xin Yu, Guang Yang, Chungen Liang, Hongying Yun, Meifang Zhang, Na Qin, Lu Gao
Abstract
) values of approximately 1 μM, but it was not effective against other viruses, including influenza virus A, human enterovirus 71 (EV71), and vaccinia virus. Triazole-1 was shown to inhibit RSV replication when added at up to 8 h after viral entry, suggesting that it inhibits RSV after viral entry. In a minigenome reporter assay in which RSV transcription regulatory sequences flanking a luciferase gene were cotransfected with RSV N/P/L/M2-1 genes into HEp-2 cells, triazole-1 demonstrated specific and dose-dependent RSV transcription inhibitory effects. Consistent with these findings, deep sequencing of the genomes of triazole-1-resistant mutants revealed a single point mutation (A to G) at nucleotide 13546 of the RSV genome, leading to a T-to-A change at amino acid position 1684 of the L protein, which is the RSV RNA polymerase for both viral transcription and replication. The effect of triazole-1 on minigenome transcription, which was mediated by the L protein containing the T1684A mutation, was significantly reduced, suggesting that the T1684A mutation alone conferred viral resistance to triazole-1.