Molecules (May 2023)

Luteolin Isolated from <i>Juncus acutus</i> L., a Potential Remedy for Human Coronavirus 229E

  • Asma Hakem,
  • Lowiese Desmarets,
  • Ramla Sahli,
  • Rawen Ben Malek,
  • Charline Camuzet,
  • Nathan François,
  • Gabriel Lefèvre,
  • Jennifer Samaillie,
  • Sophie Moureu,
  • Sevser Sahpaz,
  • Sandrine Belouzard,
  • Riadh Ksouri,
  • Karin Séron,
  • Céline Rivière

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules28114263
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 11
p. 4263

Abstract

Read online

The COVID-19 pandemic, caused by SARS-CoV-2, addressed the lack of specific antiviral drugs against coronaviruses. In this study, bioguided fractionation performed on both ethyl acetate and aqueous sub-extracts of Juncus acutus stems led to identifying luteolin as a highly active antiviral molecule against human coronavirus HCoV-229E. The apolar sub-extract (CH2Cl2) containing phenanthrene derivatives did not show antiviral activity against this coronavirus. Infection tests on Huh-7 cells, expressing or not the cellular protease TMPRSS2, using luciferase reporter virus HCoV-229E-Luc showed that luteolin exhibited a dose-dependent inhibition of infection. Respective IC50 values of 1.77 µM and 1.95 µM were determined. Under its glycosylated form (luteolin-7-O-glucoside), luteolin was inactive against HCoV-229E. Time of addition assay showed that utmost anti-HCoV-229E activity of luteolin was achieved when added at the post-inoculation step, indicating that luteolin acts as an inhibitor of the replication step of HCoV-229E. Unfortunately, no obvious antiviral activity for luteolin was found against SARS-CoV-2 and MERS-CoV in this study. In conclusion, luteolin isolated from Juncus acutus is a new inhibitor of alphacoronavirus HCoV-229E.

Keywords