Q1 · CROSS-FIELD
ArticleOA
Author: Ito, Risa ; Itoh, Yasushi ; Le, Thi Quynh Mai ; Kida, Hiroshi ; Yasui, Fumihiko ; Ikejiri, Ai ; Yamaji, Kenzaburo ; Nakayama, Misako ; Munakata, Tsubasa ; Suga, Hiroaki ; Katoh, Takayuki ; Sakoda, Yoshihiro ; Sanada, Takahiro ; Ogasawara, Kazumasa ; Ishigaki, Hirohito ; Kawaoka, Yoshihiro ; Ozawa, Makoto ; Shichinohe, Shintaro ; Honda, Tomoko ; Kohara, Michinori ; Tsukiyama-Kohara, Kyoko ; Yamamoto, Naoki ; Yamane, Daisuke ; Saito, Makoto
Abstract:Most anti-influenza drugs currently used, such as oseltamivir and zanamivir, inhibit the enzymatic activity of neuraminidase. However, neuraminidase inhibitor-resistant viruses have already been identified from various influenza virus isolates. Here, we report the development of a class of macrocyclic peptides that bind the influenza viral envelope protein hemagglutinin, named iHA. Of 28 iHAs examined, iHA-24 and iHA-100 have inhibitory effects on the in vitro replication of a wide range of Group 1 influenza viruses. In particular, iHA-100 bifunctionally inhibits hemagglutinin-mediated adsorption and membrane fusion through binding to the stalk domain of hemagglutinin. Moreover, iHA-100 shows powerful efficacy in inhibiting the growth of highly pathogenic influenza viruses and preventing severe pneumonia at later stages of infection in mouse and non-human primate cynomolgus macaque models. This study shows the potential for developing cyclic peptides that can be produced more efficiently than antibodies and have multiple functions as next-generation, mid-sized biomolecules.