PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Minimal In Vivo Efficacy of Iminosugars in a Lethal Ebola Virus Guinea Pig Model.

  • Joanna L Miller,
  • Simon G Spiro,
  • Stuart D Dowall,
  • Irene Taylor,
  • Antony Rule,
  • Dominic S Alonzi,
  • Andrew C Sayce,
  • Edward Wright,
  • Emma M Bentley,
  • Ruth Thom,
  • Graham Hall,
  • Raymond A Dwek,
  • Roger Hewson,
  • Nicole Zitzmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
p. e0167018

Abstract

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The antiviral properties of iminosugars have been reported previously in vitro and in small animal models against Ebola virus (EBOV); however, their effects have not been tested in larger animal models such as guinea pigs. We tested the iminosugars N-butyl-deoxynojirimycin (NB-DNJ) and N-(9-methoxynonyl)-1deoxynojirimycin (MON-DNJ) for safety in uninfected animals, and for antiviral efficacy in animals infected with a lethal dose of guinea pig adapted EBOV. 1850 mg/kg/day NB-DNJ and 120 mg/kg/day MON-DNJ administered intravenously, three times daily, caused no adverse effects and were well tolerated. A pilot study treating infected animals three times within an 8 hour period was promising with 1 of 4 infected NB-DNJ treated animals surviving and the remaining three showing improved clinical signs. MON-DNJ showed no protective effects when EBOV-infected guinea pigs were treated. On histopathological examination, animals treated with NB-DNJ had reduced lesion severity in liver and spleen. However, a second study, in which NB-DNJ was administered at equally-spaced 8 hour intervals, could not confirm drug-associated benefits. Neither was any antiviral effect of iminosugars detected in an EBOV glycoprotein pseudotyped virus assay. Overall, this study provides evidence that NB-DNJ and MON-DNJ do not protect guinea pigs from a lethal EBOV-infection at the dose levels and regimens tested. However, the one surviving animal and signs of improvements in three animals of the NB-DNJ treated cohort could indicate that NB-DNJ at these levels may have a marginal beneficial effect. Future work could be focused on the development of more potent iminosugars.