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Valnoctamide inhibits cytomegalovirus infection in developing brain and attenuates neurobehavioral dysfunctions and brain abnormalities
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- Society for Neuroscience, 2017.
-
Abstract
- Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most common infectious cause of brain defects and neurological dysfunction in developing human babies. Due to the teratogenicity and toxicity of available CMV antiviral agents, treatment options during early development are markedly limited. Valnoctamide (VCD), a neuroactive mood stabilizer with no known teratogenic activity, was recently demonstrated to have anti-CMV potential. However, it is not known whether this can be translated into an efficacious therapeutic effect to improve CMV-induced adverse neurological outcomes. Using multiple models of CMV infection in the developing mouse brain, we show that subcutaneous low-dose VCD suppresses CMV by reducing the level of virus available for entry into the brain and by acting directly within the brain to block virus replication and dispersal. VCD during the first 3 weeks of life restored timely acquisition of neurological milestones in neonatal male and female mice and rescued long-term motor and behavioral outcomes in juvenile male mice. CMV-mediated brain defects, including decreased brain size, cerebellar hypoplasia, and neuronal loss, were substantially attenuated by VCD. No adverse side effects on neurodevelopment of uninfected control mice receiving VCD were detected. Treatment of CMV-infected human fetal astrocytes with VCD reduced both viral infectivity and replication by blocking viral particle attachment to the cell, a mechanism that differs from available anti-CMV drugs. These data suggest that VCD during critical periods of neurodevelopment can effectively suppress CMV replication in the brain and safely improve both immediate and long-term neurological outcomes.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Cytomegalovirus (CMV) can irreversibly damage the developing brain. No anti-CMV drugs are available for use during fetal development, and treatment during the neonatal period has substantial limitations. We studied the anti-CMV actions of valnoctamide (VCD), a psychiatric sedative that appears to lack teratogenicity and toxicity, in the newborn mouse brain, a developmental period that parallels that of an early second-trimester human fetus. In infected mice, subcutaneous VCD reaches the brain and suppresses viral replication within the CNS, rescuing the animals from CMV-induced brain defects and neurological problems. Treatment of uninfected control animals exerts no detectable adverse effects. VCD also blocks CMV replication in human fetal brain cells.
- Subjects :
- Male
0301 basic medicine
endocrine system
Congenital cytomegalovirus infection
Biology
Antiviral Agents
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
medicine
Animals
Valnoctamide
Encephalitis, Viral
Adverse effect
Research Articles
Fetus
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
General Neuroscience
Cytomegalovirus, Brain Development, Neurobehavioral Dysfunctions, Brain Abnormalities
medicine.disease
Amides
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Treatment Outcome
030104 developmental biology
Animals, Newborn
Viral replication
Cytomegalovirus Infections
Immunology
Toxicity
Brain size
Female
Cerebellar hypoplasia (non-human)
Cognition Disorders
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2e587e2de969db26ab7f8e124ef2cd44