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Small molecule inhibitors reveal Niemann-Pick C1 is essential for Ebola virus infection

Authors :
Tao Ren
James M. Cunningham
Anna Bruchez
Lisa E. Hensley
Marceline Côté
Claire Marie Filone
Daniel S. Ory
Qi Li
Kartik Chandran
Kyungae Lee
John Misasi
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Summary Ebolavirus (EboV) is a highly pathogenic enveloped virus that causes outbreaks of zoonotic infection in Africa. The clinical symptoms are manifestations of the massive production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in response to infection1 and in many outbreaks, mortality exceeds 75%. The unpredictable onset, ease of transmission, rapid progression of disease, high mortality and lack of effective vaccine or therapy have created a high level of public concern about EboV2. Here we report the identification of a novel benzylpiperazine adamantane diamide-derived compound that inhibits EboV infection. Using mutant cell lines and informative derivatives of the lead compound, we show that the target of the inhibitor is the endosomal membrane protein Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1). We find that NPC1 is essential for infection, that it binds to the virus glycoprotein (GP), and that the anti-viral compounds interfere with GP binding to NPC1. Combined with the results of previous studies of GP structure and function, our findings support a model of EboV infection in which cleavage of the GP1 subunit by endosomal cathepsin proteases removes heavily glycosylated domains to expose the N-terminal domain3–7, which is a ligand for NPC1 and regulates membrane fusion by the GP2 subunit8. Thus, NPC1 is essential for EboV entry and a target for anti-viral therapy.

Details

ISSN :
14764687
Volume :
477
Issue :
7364
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b9ea6e43493951e9f53d2c1be68934dc