Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13101438
Title: cccDNA-Targeted Drug Screen Reveals a Class of Antihistamines as Suppressors of HBV Genome Levels
Authors: Ren, Ee Chee 
Zhuo, Nicole Ziyi
Goh, Zhi Yi 
Bonne, Isabelle 
Malleret, Benoit 
Ko, Hui Ling
Keywords: antihistamines
Bilastine
cccDNA
drug screen
hepatitis B antivirals
PARP inhibitors
PARP-1 antagonist
peptidomimetics
simplified fluorescence in situ hybridization
correlative light and electron microscopy
Issue Date: 24-Sep-2023
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Ren, Ee Chee, Zhuo, Nicole Ziyi, Goh, Zhi Yi, Bonne, Isabelle, Malleret, Benoit, Ko, Hui Ling (2023-09-24). cccDNA-Targeted Drug Screen Reveals a Class of Antihistamines as Suppressors of HBV Genome Levels. BIOMOLECULES 13 (10). ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13101438
Abstract: Chronic infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is incurable, as the current therapeutics cannot eliminate its persistent genomic material, cccDNA. Screening systems for cccDNA-targeting therapeutics are unavailable, as low copies of cccDNA in vitro complicate detection. To address this, cccDNA copies were massively increased to levels detectable via automated plate readers. This was achieved via continuous infection in a contact-free co-culture of an HBV generator (clone F881), which stably produced clinically relevant amounts of HBV, and HBV acceptors selected to carry high cccDNA loads. cccDNA-targeted therapeutics were then identified via reduced cccDNA-specific fluorescence, taking differences in the cell numbers and viability into account. Amongst the drugs tested, the H1 antihistamine Bilastine, HBVCP inhibitors and, surprisingly, current HBV therapeutics downregulated the cccDNA significantly, reflecting the assay’s accuracy and sensitivity in identifying drugs that induce subtle changes in cccDNA levels, which take years to manifest in vivo. Bilastine was the only therapeutic that did not reduce HBV production from F881, indicating it to be a novel direct suppressor of cccDNA levels. When further assessed, only the structurally similar antihistamines Pitolisant and Nizatidine suppressed cccDNA levels when other H1 antihistamines could not. Taken together, our rapid fluorescence cccDNA-targeted drug screen successfully identified a class of molecules with the potential to treat hepatitis B.
Source Title: BIOMOLECULES
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/247591
ISSN: 2218-273X
DOI: 10.3390/biom13101438
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