Methotrimeprazine exerts antiviral and neuroprotective effects in Japanese encephalitis virus infection through activation of adaptive ER stress and autophagy

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Abstract

Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) is the leading global cause of virus-induced encephalitis. Its pathogenesis is driven by a combination of neuronal cell death and neuroinflammation. We hypothesized that pharmacological upregulation of autophagy could exert a neuroprotective antiviral effect, and tested a panel of forty-two FDA-approved drugs that were shown to induce autophagy. Four drugs were tested in the JE mouse model based on in vitro protective effects on neuronal cell death, inhibition of viral replication, and anti-inflammatory effects in microglial cells. The antipsychotic phenothiazines Methotrimeprazine (MTP) and Trifluoperazine (TFP) showed a significant survival benefit with reduced virus titers in the brain, prevention of blood-brain barrier (BBB) breach, and inhibition of neuroinflammation. Both drugs were potent mTOR-independent autophagy flux inducers. Mechanistically MTP inhibited SERCA channel functioning, thereby resulting in rise in cytosolic calcium levels, and induction of a unique adaptive ER stress response. In virus infected drug treated cells, there was a strong transcriptional downregulation of type I interferon and interferon-stimulated genes and upregulation of cholesterol metabolic pathway genes. The drugs exerted an autophagy-dependent antiviral effect at the level of JEV protein translation/replication complex formation in diverse cell types. Inhibition of inflammatory cytokine/chemokine release from mouse microglial cells was partly autophagy-dependent. Our study suggests that MTP exerts a combined antiviral and anti-inflammatory effect in JEV infection, and has therapeutic potential to be repurposed for JE treatment.

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License: CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0