Marine Drugs (Feb 2022)

Virucidal and Immunostimulating Activities of Monogalactosyl Diacylglyceride from <i>Coccomyxa</i> sp. KJ, a Green Microalga, against Murine Norovirus and Feline Calicivirus

  • Kyoko Hayashi,
  • Satoko Komatsu,
  • Hitoshi Kuno,
  • Satomi Asai,
  • Iori Matsuura,
  • Vyankatesh Ramlu Kudkyal,
  • Toshio Kawahara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/md20020131
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 2
p. 131

Abstract

Read online

Human noroviruses are the most common pathogens causing acute gastroenteritis and may lead to more severe illnesses among immunosuppressed people, including elderly and organ transplant recipients. To date, there are no safe and effective vaccines or antiviral agents for norovirus infections. In the present study, we aimed to demonstrate the antiviral activity of monogalactosyl diacylglyceride (MGDG) isolated from a microalga, Coccomyxa sp. KJ, against murine norovirus (MNV) and feline calicivirus (FCV), the surrogates for human norovirus. MGDG showed virucidal activities against these viruses in a dose- and time-dependent manner—MGDG at 100 μg/mL reduced the infectivity of MNV and FCV to approximately 10% after 60 min incubation. In the animal experiments of MNV infection, intraoral administration of MGDG (1 mg/day) exerted a therapeutic effect by suppressing viral shedding in the feces and produced high neutralizing antibody titers in sera and feces. When MGDG was orally administered to immunocompromised mice treated with 5-fluorouracil, the compound exhibited earlier stopping of viral shedding and higher neutralizing antibody titers of sera than those in the control mice administered with distilled water. Thus, MGDG may offer a new therapeutic and prophylactic alternative against norovirus infections.

Keywords