1. Academic Validation
  2. Inhibition of Simian Virus 40 replication by targeting the molecular chaperone function and ATPase activity of T antigen

Inhibition of Simian Virus 40 replication by targeting the molecular chaperone function and ATPase activity of T antigen

  • Virus Res. 2009 Apr;141(1):71-80. doi: 10.1016/j.virusres.2008.12.018.
Christine M Wright 1 Sandlin P Seguin Sheara W Fewell Haijiang Zhang Chandra Ishwad Abhay Vats Clifford A Lingwood Peter Wipf Ellen Fanning James M Pipas Jeffrey L Brodsky
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA.
Abstract

Polyomaviruses such as BK virus and JC virus have been linked to several diseases, but treatments that thwart their propagation are limited in part because of slow growth and cumbersome culturing conditions. In contrast, the replication of one member of this family, Simian Virus 40 (SV40), is robust and has been well-characterized. SV40 replication requires two domains within the viral-encoded large tumor antigen (TAg): The ATPase domain and the N-terminal J domain, which stimulates the ATPase activity of the HSP70 chaperone. To assess whether inhibitors of polyomavirus replication could be identified, we examined a recently described library of small molecules, some of which inhibit chaperone function. One compound, MAL2-11B, inhibited both TAg's endogenous ATPase activity and the TAg-mediated activation of HSP70. MAL2-11B also reduced SV40 propagation in plaque assays and compromised DNA replication in Cell Culture and in vitro. Furthermore, the compound significantly reduced the growth of BK virus in a human kidney cell line. These data indicate that pharmacological inhibition of TAg's chaperone and ATPase activities may provide a route to combat polyomavirus-mediated disease.

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