- Inhibitory effects of acetyl-11-keto-β-boswellic acid (AKBA) on human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) in vitro
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Bingquan Chu, Zhiwei Ding, Xinna Wu, Yunchuang Chang, Chunxia Wu, Yicheng Fu, Genxiang Mao, Sanying Wang
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Received January 13, 2026 Accepted February 2, 2026 Published online March 25, 2026
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.71150/jm.2601007
[Epub ahead of print]
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Abstract
PDF Supplementary Material
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This study presents the first investigation of acetyl-11-keto-β-boswellic acid (AKBA)’s anti-human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) activity in vitro and elucidates its underlying mechanisms. In HCMV Towne strain-infected WI-38 cells, AKBA (1-12 μM) exhibited negligible cytotoxicity while significantly suppressing virus-induced cytopathic effects (CPE) at 6–10 μM, with dose-dependent reduction of viral proteins (IE1/2 and p52) expression, viral DNA copy number (UL123, UL44, and UL32), and infectious viral progeny titer (TCID50). Time-of-addition experiments demonstrated the primary antiviral activity of AKBA during post-entry phase, along with direct virion inactivation. Transcriptome analysis revealed that AKBA significantly downregulated the expression of the host factor NR4A1 induced by HCMV, a finding further validated by Western blotting. Further gene knockdown experiments confirmed that silencing NR4A1 significantly reduced the expression of viral proteins IE1/2, thereby validating NR4A1 as a key host factor for HCMV infection. These findings indicate that AKBA has a potent and dose-dependent inhibitory effect on HCMV replication in WI-38 cells, and proves that this effect is mediated through two different mechanisms: one is the downregulation of the expression of the key host factor NR4A1, and the other is the direct inactivation of HCMV viral particles.
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