Mechanism of action of glycyrrhizic acid in inhibition of Epstein-Barr virus replication in vitro

JC Lin - Antiviral research, 2003 - Elsevier
JC Lin
Antiviral research, 2003Elsevier
We report here that glycyrrhizic acid (GL), a component of licorice root (Glycyrrhiza radix), is
active against EBV replication in superinfected Raji cells in a dose-dependent fashion. The
IC50 values for viral inhibition and cell growth were 0.04 and 4.8 mM, respectively. The
selectivity index (ratio of IC50 for cell growth to IC50 for viral DNA synthesis) was 120. Time
of addition experiments suggested that GL interferes with an early step of EBV replication
cycle (possibly penetration). GL had no effect on viral adsorption, nor did it inactivate EBV …
We report here that glycyrrhizic acid (GL), a component of licorice root (Glycyrrhiza radix), is active against EBV replication in superinfected Raji cells in a dose-dependent fashion. The IC50 values for viral inhibition and cell growth were 0.04 and 4.8mM, respectively. The selectivity index (ratio of IC50 for cell growth to IC50 for viral DNA synthesis) was 120. Time of addition experiments suggested that GL interferes with an early step of EBV replication cycle (possibly penetration). GL had no effect on viral adsorption, nor did it inactivate EBV particles. Thus, GL represents a new class of anti-EBV compounds with a mode of action different from that of the nucleoside analogs that inhibit viral DNA polymerase.
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