Volume 15, Issue 1 p. 71-79
Article

Antiviral effect of flavonoids on human viruses

Tej N. Kaul,

Tej N. Kaul

Department of Pediatrics and Microbiology, State University of New York

Division of Infectious Diseases, Children's Hospital and Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo, New York

Search for more papers by this author
Elliott Middleton Jr. M.D.,

Corresponding Author

Elliott Middleton Jr. M.D.

Department of Medicine and Pediatrics, State University of New York

Allergy and Clinical Immunology, Children's Hospital and Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo, New York

Allergy Division, Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo, N.Y. 14203===Search for more papers by this author
Pearay L. Ogra,

Pearay L. Ogra

Department of Pediatrics and Microbiology, State University of New York

Division of Infectious Diseases, Children's Hospital and Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo, New York

Search for more papers by this author
First published: January 1985
Citations: 321

Abstract

The effect of several naturally occurring dietary flavonoids including quercetin, naringin, hesperetin, and catechin on the infectivity and replication of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-I), polio-virus type 1, parainfluenza virus type 3 (Pf-3), and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) was studied in vitro in cell culture monolayers employing the technique of viral plaque reduction. Quercetin caused a concentration-dependent reduction in the infectivity of each virus. In addition, it reduced intracellular replication of each virus when monolayers were infected and subsequently cultured in medium containing quercetin. Preincubation of tissue culture cell monolayers with quercetin did not affect the ability of the viruses to infect or replicate in the tissue culture monolayers. Hesperetin had no effect on infectivity but it reduced intracellular replication of each of the viruses. Catechin inhibited the infectivity but not the replication of RSV and HSV-1 and had negligible effects on the other viruses. Naringin had no effect on either the infectivity or the replication of any of the viruses studied. Thus, naturally occurring flavonoids possess a variable spectrum of antiviral activity against certain RNA (RSV, Pf-3, polio) and DNA (HSV-1) viruses acting to inhibit infectivity and/or replication.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.