AI Article Synopsis

  • Amiodarone affects the endocytic pathway, interfering with proteolysis and causing vacuole formation, but its uptake and effects on SARS coronavirus are not fully understood.
  • The study aimed to analyze how amiodarone is taken up by cells, the origins of the vacuoles it creates, and its influence on SARS coronavirus entry into cells, which requires the viral spike protein to be cleaved.
  • Findings include that amiodarone accumulates in acidic organelles, its unique lateral group is crucial for its uptake, it enlarges late endosomes, and it inhibits SARS coronavirus spreading by acting after viral entry into endosomes.

Article Abstract

Amiodarone interferes with the endocytic pathway, inhibits proteolysis, and causes the formation of vacuoles, but uptake and intracellular distribution of the drug, origin of vacuoles, and functional consequences of amiodarone accumulation remain unclear. Our objective was to study amiodarone uptake, clarify the origin of vacuoles, and investigate the effect of amiodarone on the life cycle of the coronavirus responsible for the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which, to enter cells, relies on the proteolytic cleavage of a viral spike protein by the endosomal proteinase cathepsin L. Using alveolar macrophages, we studied uptake of (125)I-amiodarone and (125)I-B2, an analog lacking the lateral group diethylamino-beta-ethoxy, and analyzed the effects of amiodarone on the distribution of endosomal markers and on the uptake of an acidotropic dye. Furthermore, using Vero cells, we tested the impact of amiodarone on the in vitro spreading of the SARS coronavirus. We found that (1) amiodarone associates with different cell membranes and accumulates in acidic organelles; (2) the diethylamino-beta-ethoxy group is an important determinant of uptake; (3) vacuoles forming upon exposure to amiodarone are enlarged late endosomes; (4) amiodarone inhibits the spreading in vitro of SARS coronavirus; and (5) trypsin cleavage of the viral spike protein before infection, which permits virus entry through the plasma membrane, does not impair amiodarone antiviral activity. We conclude that amiodarone alters late compartments of the endocytic pathway and inhibits SARS coronavirus infection by acting after the transit of the virus through endosomes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1165/rcmb.2007-0217OCDOI Listing

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