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      High-throughput cell-based screen for chemicals that inhibit infection by simian virus 40 and human polyomaviruses.

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          Abstract

          We developed a high-throughput, cell-based screen to identify chemicals that inhibit infection by the primate polyomaviruses. The screen is based on the detection of compounds that inhibit the ability of a replication-defective simian virus 40 (SV40)-based viral vector to cause growth arrest in HeLa cells by repressing the expression of the endogenous human papillomavirus E7 oncogene in these cells. We identified two compounds, ellagic acid and spiperone, that suppressed the ability of the SV40 recombinant virus to inhibit cellular DNA synthesis. These compounds caused a marked reduction of the ability of wild-type SV40 to productively infect permissive monkey cells, even when the compounds were added several hours after infection. The fraction of cells expressing SV40 large T antigen and the levels of T antigen mRNA were reduced in infected human and monkey cells treated with ellagic acid and spiperone, suggesting that these compounds block a step in the virus life cycle prior to SV40 early gene expression. Ellagic acid and spiperone also inhibited large T antigen expression by BK virus and JC virus, two important, pathogenic human polyomaviruses.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Virol.
          Journal of virology
          American Society for Microbiology
          1098-5514
          0022-538X
          Jun 2009
          : 83
          : 11
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8005, USA.
          Article
          JVI.00203-09
          10.1128/JVI.00203-09
          2681952
          19297472
          0edb612b-3665-4159-9b1e-29b380671583
          History

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