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2010 (English)In: Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, ISSN 0066-4804, E-ISSN 1098-6596, Vol. 54, no 9, p. 3871-3877Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Adenovirus infections are widespread in society and are occasionally associated with severe, but rarely with life-threatening, disease in otherwise healthy individuals. In contrast, adenovirus infections present a real threat to immunocompromised individuals and can result in disseminated and fatal disease. The number of patients undergoing immunosuppressive therapy for solid organ or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is steadily increasing, as is the number of AIDS patients, and this makes the problem of adenovirus infections even more urgent to solve. There is no formally approved treatment of adenovirus infections today, and existing antiviral agents evaluated for their anti-adenoviral effect give inconsistent results. We have developed a whole cell-based assay for high-throughput screening of potential anti-adenoviral compounds. The assay is unique in that it is based on a replication competent adenovirus type 11p GFP-expressing vector (RCAd11pGFP). This allows measurement of fluorescence changes as a direct result of RCAd11pGFP genome expression. Using this assay, we have screened 9,800 commercially available small organic compounds. Initially, we observed approximately 400 compounds that inhibited adenovirus expression in vitro by >/= 80% but only 24 were later confirmed as dose-dependent inhibitors of adenovirus. One compound in particular, 2-[[2-(benzoylamino)benzoyl]amino]-benzoic acid, turned out to be a potent inhibitor of adenovirus replication.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
American society for microbiology, 2010
Keywords
rapid colorimetric assay; adenovirus infection; transplant recipients; in-vitro; immunocompromised host; formazan assay; renal-failure; cidofovir; growth; proliferation
National Category
Microbiology in the medical area
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-35281 (URN)10.1128/AAC.00203-10 (DOI)000281005900048 ()20585112 (PubMedID)2-s2.0-77956097757 (Scopus ID)
2010-08-112010-08-112023-03-23Bibliographically approved