Turmeric Curcumin Inhibits Entry of All Hepatitis
Transcription
Turmeric Curcumin Inhibits Entry of All Hepatitis
Turmeric curcumin inhibits entry of all hepatitis c virus genotypes into human liver cells PD Dr. Eike Steinmann Centre for Experimental and Clinical Infection Research Department of Experimental Virology, Twincore* *joint venture between Medical School Hannover and Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research HCV entry into hepatocytes: targets for antiviral therapy - virus neutralization - attachment inhibitors - entry inhibitors - fusion inhibitors What and why Curcumin? • Curcumin is inexpensive and easy to find (turmeric or kurkuma has 1-2% curcumin content) • Documented to have a wide spectrum of biological and pharmacological activities (antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anticarcinogenic, etc) • Ethnopharmacologically known to protect liver against cirrhosis (through suppressing fibrosis and liver inflammation) • Curcumin is considered safe even at high doses (based on various animal and human studies) • Until 2013, NIH has registered 77 clinical trials to study the use of dietary curcumin 100 100 10 H77c/1a/R2a J4/1b/R2a JcR2a S52/3a/R2a ED43/4a/R2a SA13/5a/R2a HK6a/6a/R2a QC69/7a/R2a 1 0.1 0 5 10 10 1 15 20 Log10 cell viability (% of DMSO) Log10 infection (% of DMSO) Curcumin inhibits the infection of all HCV genotypes 25 Curcumin (μM) + DMSO + DMSO + Curcumin 20 µM H77c/1a SA13/5a J6/2a (Jc1) HK6a/6a S52/3a QC69/7a ED43/4a TNcc (Gt 1a) + Curcumin 20 µM DAPI NS5A Curcumin treatment does not affect the expression of essential HCV receptors hCD81 hSR-BI % of Max Secondary only + DMSO + Curcumin 10 μM + Curcumin 20 μM Hep56.1D hOccludin hNPC1L1 hClaudin-1 β-actin β-actin DMSO 10 20 Hep56.1D Curcumin (μM) DMSO 10 20 Hep56.1D Curcumin (μM) The mode of action of curcumin Log10 infection rate (% of DMSO control) -4h 0h 4h 8h 1000 precopost 100 10 1 Control 5 10 Curcumin (μM) 20 The mode of action of curcumin +/- Curcumin or JFH1-DPH THC JFH1-R18 Attachment Membrane fluidity of the virus (A) +/- Curcumin or THC (B) 5% FBS: IC50, 13.3 +/- 5.7 μM Fusion (C) Serum-free: IC50, 18.2 +/- 5.0 μM Curcumin is effective in combination with commonly used HCV inhibitors Jc1 reporter virus + Curcumin + PEG-IFNa, Boceprevir or CsA Huh7.5 In vivo study of curcumin In vivo study of curcumin (A) The effect of no-treatment control, carrier (3% EtOH), and normal curcumin (20 mg/kg dissolved in carrier) against HCV-CRE infection in Rosa26-Fluc mice. Nano-formulated curcumin Summary • Curcumin inhibits HCV infection as an entry inhibitor • Curcumin inhibits the entry of all HCV genotypes • All curcumin derivates found in curcuminoids have the same potency in inhibiting HCV entry • The α,β-unsaturated ketone group in curcumin is important for the antiviral activity • Curcumin acts by preventing the virus attachment and fusion, while also inhibits cell-to-cell transmission • The combination treatment of curcumin and other HCV therapy promotes better HCV clearance in cell culture • Optimization for in vivo application Acknowledgement Twincore Institute of Experimental Virology Thomas Pietschmann Cooperation partners Luis Schang, Che Colpitts Michael Ott Dorothea Bankwitz Stephanie Pfänder Philip Meuleman Patrick Behrendt Stephanie Walter Alexander Ploss, Charles Rice Richard Brown Juliane Dörrbecker Heni Rachmawati Janina Bruening Mandy Doepke Anne Frentzen Gisa Gerold Corinne Ginkel Christina Grethe Sabine Giese Sibylle Haid Kathrin Hüging Angga Kusuma Paula Perin Nina Riebesehl Gabrielle Vieyres Kathrin Welsch
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