AI Article Synopsis

  • Infections from New World mammarenaviruses, like Junín virus, cause serious viral hemorrhagic fever and currently lack FDA-approved treatments, classifying them as high-priority pathogens.
  • ARN-75039 is a powerful fusion inhibitor that has shown effectiveness against various mammarenaviruses in laboratory settings and provides protection in guinea pigs even after delayed treatment following viral exposure.
  • The study also indicates that combining ARN-75039 with favipiravir enhances treatment effectiveness and improves survival rates in infected guinea pigs, supporting its potential as a therapeutic option for these infections.

Article Abstract

Infections by pathogenic New World mammarenaviruses (NWM)s, including Junín virus (JUNV), can result in a severe life-threatening viral hemorrhagic fever syndrome. In the absence of FDA-licensed vaccines or antivirals, these viruses are considered high priority pathogens. The mammarenavirus envelope glycoprotein complex (GPC) mediates pH-dependent fusion between viral and cellular membranes, which is essential to viral entry and may be vulnerable to small-molecule inhibitors that disrupt this process. ARN-75039 is a potent fusion inhibitor of a broad spectrum of pseudotyped and native mammarenaviruses in cell culture and Tacaribe virus infection in mice. In the present study, we evaluated ARN-75039 against pathogenic JUNV in the rigorous guinea pig infection model. The compound was well-tolerated and had favorable pharmacokinetics supporting once-per-day oral dosing in guinea pigs. Importantly, significant protection against JUNV challenge was observed even when ARN-75039 was withheld until 6 days after the viral challenge when clinical signs of disease are starting to develop. We also show that ARN-75039 combination treatment with favipiravir, a viral polymerase inhibitor, results in synergistic activity in vitro and improves survival outcomes in JUNV-challenged guinea pigs. Our findings support the continued development of ARN-75039 as an attractive therapeutic candidate for treating mammarenaviral hemorrhagic fevers, including those associated with NWM infection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10187609PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.antiviral.2022.105444DOI Listing

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