Litcius/Paper detail

Autophagy Modulators in Coronavirus Diseases: A Double Strike in Viral Burden and Inflammation

Rafael Cardoso Maciel Costa Silva, Jhones Sousa Ribeiro, Gustavo Peixoto Duarte da Silva, Luciana Jesus da Costa, Leonardo Holanda Travassos

2022Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Coronaviruses are the etiologic agents of several diseases. Coronaviruses of critical medical importance are characterized by highly inflammatory pathophysiology, involving severe pulmonary impairment and infection of multiple cell types within the body. Here, we discuss the interplay between coronaviruses and autophagy regarding virus life cycle, cell resistance, and inflammation, highlighting distinct mechanisms by which autophagy restrains inflammatory responses, especially those involved in coronavirus pathogenesis. We also address different autophagy modulators available and the rationale for drug repurposing as an attractive adjunctive therapy. We focused on pharmaceuticals being tested in clinical trials with distinct mechanisms but with autophagy as a common target. These autophagy modulators act in cell resistance to virus infection and immunomodulation, providing a double-strike to prevent or treat severe disease development and death from coronaviruses diseases.

Topics & Concepts

AutophagyInflammationCoronavirusDrug repositioningPathogenesisImmunologyMedicineRepurposingVirusDiseaseBiologyVirologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DrugApoptosisPharmacologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyBiochemistryEcologyAutophagy in Disease and TherapyCalcium signaling and nucleotide metabolismExtracellular vesicles in disease