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Anti-enterovirus 71 activities of Melissa officinalis extract and its biologically active constituent rosmarinic acid.


ABSTRACT: Enterovirus 71 (EV71) infection is endemic in the Asia-Pacific region. No specific antiviral drug has been available to treat EV71 infection. Melissa officinalis (MO) is a medicinal plant with long history of usage in the European and Middle East. We investigated whether an aqueous solution of concentrated methanolic extract (MOM) possesses antiviral activity. MOM inhibited plaque formation, cytopathic effect, and viral protein synthesis in EV71-infected cells. Using spectral techniques, we identified rosmarinic acid (RA) as a biologically active constituent of MOM. RA reduced viral attachment and entry; cleavage of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4?G (eIF4G); reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation; and translocation of heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (hnRNP A1) from nucleus to cytoplasm. It alleviated EV71-induced hyperphosphorylation of p38 kinase and EPS15. RA is likely to suppress ROS-mediated p38 kinase activation, and such downstream molecular events as hnRNP A1 translocation and EPS15-regulated membrane trafficking in EV71-infected cells. These findings suggest that MO and its constituent RA possess anti-EV71 activities, and may serve as a candidate drug for therapeutic and prophylactic uses against EV71 infection.

SUBMITTER: Chen SG 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5613005 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Anti-enterovirus 71 activities of Melissa officinalis extract and its biologically active constituent rosmarinic acid.

Chen Sin-Guang SG   Leu Yann-Lii YL   Cheng Mei-Ling ML   Ting Siew Chin SC   Liu Ching-Chuan CC   Wang Shulhn-Der SD   Yang Cheng-Hung CH   Hung Cheng-Yu CY   Sakurai Hiroaki H   Chen Kuan-Hsing KH   Ho Hung-Yao HY  

Scientific reports 20170925 1


Enterovirus 71 (EV71) infection is endemic in the Asia-Pacific region. No specific antiviral drug has been available to treat EV71 infection. Melissa officinalis (MO) is a medicinal plant with long history of usage in the European and Middle East. We investigated whether an aqueous solution of concentrated methanolic extract (MOM) possesses antiviral activity. MOM inhibited plaque formation, cytopathic effect, and viral protein synthesis in EV71-infected cells. Using spectral techniques, we iden  ...[more]

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