Enhanced inhibition of influenza virus infection by peptide-noble metal nanoparticle conjugates



Alghrair, Zaid, Fernig, David ORCID: 0000-0003-4875-4293 and Ebrahimi, Bahram ORCID: 0000-0002-8758-4592
(2018) Enhanced inhibition of influenza virus infection by peptide-noble metal nanoparticle conjugates. BioRxiv. 324939-.

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Abstract

Influenza virus is a major medical and veterinary health concern and causes global pandemics. The peptide FluPep is an established inhibitor of influenza virus infectivity in model systems. We have explored the potential for FluPep functionalised noble metal nanoparticle to enhance the antiviral activity of the peptide Flupep and determined their potential for the delivery of FluPep. The FluPep ligand designed here is FluPep extended at its N-terminus with the sequence CVVVTAAA-, to allow its incorporation into a mix matrix ligand shell of a peptidol and an alkanethiol ethyleneglycol comprising 70% H-CVVVTol and 30% HS(CH2)11(ethyleneglycol)4 (both mole/mole). Gold and silver nanoparticles (~10 nm diameter) prepared with up to 5% (mole/mole) FluPep ligand contained in the mixture of mix-matrix peptide ligands remained as stable as the control mix-matrix coated nanoparticles against ligand exchange with dithiothreitol. FluPep ligand was found to inhibit viral plaque formation in canine MDCK cells (IC50 2.1 nM), but was less potent than FluPep itself (IC50 140 pM). FluPep ligand functonalised nanoparticles retained antiviral activity in the plaque assay. Moreover, at low grafting densities (where nanoparticles incorporate ~1 FluPep ligand, the antiviral potency in terms of FluPep ligand concentration was enhanced significantly for gold and silver nanoparticles (IC50 ~8-fold and ~3-fold lower, respectively). At higher grafting density the potency relative to free FluPep ligand concentration decreased. The data demonstrate that conjugation of FluPep to gold and silver nanoparticles enhances its antiviral potency; the antimicrobial activity of silver ions may enable the design of even more potent anti-microbial inhibitors.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Nanotechnology, Influenza, Pneumonia & Influenza, Bioengineering, Emerging Infectious Diseases, Infectious Diseases, 5 Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions, 5.1 Pharmaceuticals, Infection
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 30 Jul 2018 10:33
Last Modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:38
DOI: 10.1101/324939
Open Access URL: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/05/17/3...
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URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3024296