New therapeutic strategies targeting influenza are actively sought due to limitations in current drugs available. Host-directed therapy is an emerging concept to target host functions involved in pathogen life cycles and/or pathogenesis, rather than pathogen components themselves. From this perspective, we focused on an essential host partner of influenza viruses, the RED–SMU1 splicing complex. Here, we identified two synthetic molecules targeting an α-helix/groove interface essential for RED–SMU1 complex assembly. We solved the structure of the SMU1 N-terminal domain in complex with RED or bound to one of the molecules identified to disrupt this complex. We show that these compounds inhibiting RED–SMU1 interaction also decrease endogenous RED-SMU1 levels and inhibit viral mRNA splicing and viral multiplication, while preserving cell viability. Overall, our data demonstrate the potential of RED-SMU1 destabilizing molecules as an antiviral therapy that could be active against a wide range of influenza viruses and be less prone to drug resistance.
CITATION STYLE
Ashraf, U., Tengo, L., Le Corre, L., Fournier, G., Busca, P., McCarthy, A. A., … Naffakh, N. (2019). Destabilization of the human RED–SMU1 splicing complex as a basis for host-directed antiinfluenza strategy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 166(22), 10968–10977. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1901214116
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