To study the functional involvement of cellular membrane properties on arenavirus infection, saturated fatty acids of variable
chain length (C10–C18) were evaluated for their inhibitory activity against the multiplication of Junin virus (JUNV). The
most active inhibitor was lauric acid (C12), which reduced virus yields of several attenuated and pathogenic strains of JUNV
in a dose dependent manner, without affecting cell viability. Fatty acids with shorter or longer chain length had a reduced
or negligible anti-JUNV activity. Lauric acid did not inactivate virion infectivity neither interacted with the cell to induce
a state refractory to virus infection. From mechanistic studies, it can be concluded that lauric acid inhibited a late maturation
stage in the replicative cycle of JUNV. Viral protein synthesis was not affected by the compound, but the expression of glycoproteins
in the plasma membrane was diminished. A direct correlation between the inhibition of JUNV production and the stimulation
of triacylglycerol cell content was demonstrated, and both lauric-acid induced effects were dependent on the continued presence
of the fatty acid. Thus, the decreased insertion of viral glycoproteins into the plasma membrane, apparently due to the increased
incorporation of triacylglycerols, seems to cause an inhibition of JUNV maturation and release.
Received August 2, 2000 accepted September 21, 2000