Fluoxetine Inhibits Enterovirus Replication by Targeting the Viral 2C Protein in a Stereospecific Manner
- Authors
- Type
- Published Article
- Journal
- ACS Infectious Diseases
- Publisher
- American Chemical Society
- Publication Date
- Jul 15, 2019
- Volume
- 5
- Issue
- 9
- Pages
- 1609–1623
- Identifiers
- DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.9b00179
- PMID: 31305993
- PMCID: PMC6747591
- Source
- PubMed Central
- Keywords
- License
- Unknown
Abstract
Enteroviruses (family Picornaviridae ) comprise a large group of human pathogens against which no licensed antiviral therapy exists. Drug-repurposing screens uncovered the FDA-approved drug fluoxetine as a replication inhibitor of enterovirus B and D species. Fluoxetine likely targets the nonstructural viral protein 2C, but detailed mode-of-action studies are missing because structural information on 2C of fluoxetine-sensitive enteroviruses is lacking. We here show that broad-spectrum anti-enteroviral activity of fluoxetine is stereospecific concomitant with binding to recombinant 2C. ( S )-Fluoxetine inhibits with a 5-fold lower 50% effective concentration (EC50) than racemic fluoxetine. Using a homology model of 2C of the fluoxetine-sensitive enterovirus coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) based upon a recently elucidated structure of a fluoxetine-insensitive enterovirus, we predicted stable binding of ( S )-fluoxetine. Structure-guided mutations disrupted binding and rendered coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) resistant to fluoxetine. The study provides new insights into the anti-enteroviral mode-of-action of fluoxetine. Importantly, using only ( S )-fluoxetine would allow for lower dosing in patients, thereby likely reducing side effects.