Author: Alketbi, Eman Humaid; Hamdy, Rania; Elâ€Kabalawy, Abdalla; Juric, Viktorija; Pignitter, Marc; A. Mosa, Kareem; Almehdi, Ahmed M.; Elâ€Keblawy, Ali A.; Soliman, Sameh S. M.
Title: Lipidâ€based therapies against SARSâ€CoVâ€2 infection Cord-id: 1a0h7uce Document date: 2021_1_13
ID: 1a0h7uce
Snippet: Viruses have evolved to manipulate host lipid metabolism to benefit their replication cycle. Enveloped viruses, including coronaviruses, use host lipids in various stages of the viral life cycle, particularly in the formation of replication compartments and envelopes. Host lipids are utilised by the virus in receptor binding, viral fusion and entry, as well as viral replication. Association of dyslipidaemia with the pathological development of Covidâ€19 raises the possibility that exploitation
Document: Viruses have evolved to manipulate host lipid metabolism to benefit their replication cycle. Enveloped viruses, including coronaviruses, use host lipids in various stages of the viral life cycle, particularly in the formation of replication compartments and envelopes. Host lipids are utilised by the virus in receptor binding, viral fusion and entry, as well as viral replication. Association of dyslipidaemia with the pathological development of Covidâ€19 raises the possibility that exploitation of host lipid metabolism might have therapeutic benefit against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSâ€CoVâ€2). In this review, promising host lipid targets are discussed along with potential inhibitors. In addition, specific host lipids are involved in the inflammatory responses due to viral infection, so lipid supplementation represents another potential strategy to counteract the severity of viral infection. Furthermore, switching the lipid metabolism through a ketogenic diet is another potential way of limiting the effects of viral infection. Taken together, restricting the access of host lipids to the virus, either by using lipid inhibitors or supplementation with exogenous lipids, might significantly limit SARSâ€CoVâ€2 infection and/or severity.
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