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. 2020 Jan 27;6(1):e03217.
doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e03217. eCollection 2020 Jan.

Coumarin: An emerging antiviral agent

Affiliations

Coumarin: An emerging antiviral agent

Shruti Mishra et al. Heliyon. .

Abstract

Viral infections are responsible for many illnesses, and recent outbreaks have raised public health concerns. Despite the availability of many antiviral drugs, they are often unsuccessful due to the generation of viral mutants and less effective against their target virus. Identifying novel antiviral drugs is therefore of critical importance and natural products are an excellent source for such discoveries. Coumarin is one such natural compound that is a potential drug candidate owing to its properties of stability, solubility, and low toxicity. There are numerous evidences showing its inhibitory role against infection of various viruses such as HIV, Influenza, Enterovirus 71 (EV71) and coxsackievirus A16 (CVA16). The mechanisms involve either inhibition of proteins essential for viral entry, replication and infection or regulation of cellular pathways such as Akt-Mtor (mammalian target of rapamycin), NF-κB (nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells), and anti-oxidative pathway including NrF-2 (The nuclear factor erythroid 2 (NFE2)-related factor 2). This review summarizes the present state of understanding with a focus on coumarin's antiviral effect and their possible molecular mechanisms against Influenza virus, HIV, Hepatitis virus, Dengue virus and Chikungunya virus.

Keywords: Antiviral; Coumarin; Health sciences; Inhibitor; Mechanism; Microbiology; Natural product; Pharmaceutical science; Pharmacology; Public health; Viral replication.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Antiviral Mechanism of coumarin in Infected Host cells: Viral infection involves various stages (1) binding of virion with receptor present at the cell surface, followed by (2) fusion and entry, (3) viral genome replication and transcription, (4) translation and (5) virion assembly, and ultimately budding and release. Chemotherapeutics target these critical stages of viral life cycle. Likewise, coumarin inhibits many of the proteins involved in the transcription/translation machineries required in virus life cycle. Additionally, coumarin modulates the host cell signaling pathways, NF-κB, and inflammatory redox-sensitive pathways, which block the virus replication. Many facets of anti-viral effect of coumarin has been demonstrated in numerous viruses as indicated. (Figure was made using Biorender Online tool and Microsoft powerpoint).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Chemical structure of coumarin and its derivatives: Anti-viral activity of coumarin derivatives against several viruses. (Figure was made using Microsoft Powerpoint).

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