Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Nov 2021)
E-N-(2-acetyl-phenyl)-3-phenyl-acrylamide targets abrin and ricin toxicity: Hitting two toxins with one stone
Abstract
The efficacy of small molecule inhibitors (SMIs) against the enzymatic activity of Shiga toxin prompted the evaluation of their efficacy on related toxins viz. ricin and abrin. Ricin, like Shiga toxin, is listed as a category B bioweapon and belongs to the type II family of ribosome inactivating proteins (RIPs). Abrin though structurally and functionally similar to ricin, is considerably more toxic. In the present study, 35 compounds were evaluated in A549 cells in in vitro assays, of which 5 offered protection against abrin and 2 against ricin, with IC50 values ranging between 30.5-1379 μM and 300-341 μM, respectively. These findings are substantiated by fluorescence based thermal shift assay. Moreover, the binding of the promising compounds to the toxin components has been validated by Surface Plasmon Resonance assay and in vitro protein synthesis assay. In vivo studies reveal complete protection of mice with compound 4 E-N-(2-acetyl-phenyl)-3-phenyl-acrylamide against orally administered lethal doses of, both, abrin and ricin. The present study thus proposes the emergence of E-N-(2-acetyl-phenyl)-3-phenyl-acrylamide as a lead compound against RIPs.