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  • An antiviral drug screening system for enterovirus 71 based on an improved plaque assay: A potential high-throughput method.

An antiviral drug screening system for enterovirus 71 based on an improved plaque assay: A potential high-throughput method.

Journal of medical virology (2019-03-23)
Yingxian Yin, Yi Xu, Zhiying Ou, Xiangling Yang, Huanliang Liu
ABSTRACT

Plaque assay plays an irreplaceable role in a variety of virological studies, including determining titers of viruses. Our previous study showed that a simple and highly repeatable plaque assay could be used for enterovirus 71 (EV-A71). Now, we show that using a subclone of a clinical EV-A71 isolate and a rhabdomyosarcoma cell line (RD), a plaque assay based on an EV-A71/RD model could exhibit the most rapid formation of plaques (<2 days), with much higher repeatability and consistency. Inspired by a plaque inhibitory test for testing ribavirin and interferon, as well as a plaque reduction neutralization test, this modified method has been used to establish a convenient system by using 96-well plates for screening anti-EV-A71 drugs from a 130-compound library containing multiple types of inhibitors. Nine candidate effective compounds for EV-A71 have been screened out, and among them, nobiletin (flavonoid) was found to be a novel effective compound at the concentration of 10 μM. Our findings imply that this improved method based on an EV-A71/RD model proved to be a potential high-throughput method in screening novel antiviral drugs for EV-A71. Undoubtedly, this method can also be applied to other viruses that can produce an obvious cytopathic effect.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Interferon α 2B human, IFN-α 2B, recombinant, expressed in HEK 293 cells, HumanKine®, suitable for cell culture
Sigma-Aldrich
Ribavirin, antiviral