Inhibition of influenza virus replication by phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotides.

Abstract
Oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) were synthesized and tested for their antiviral activity against influenza viruses. ODNs corresponded to the polymerase PB1 gene of either influenza A/WSN/33 virus or influenza C/JJ/50 virus. All compounds were 20 nucleotides long, including control ODNs containing mismatches. The phosphodiester ODNs (O-ODNs) failed to inhibit replication of influenza A and influenza C viruses at concentrations up to 80 .mu.M, possibly due to intracellular nuclease digestion of the unmodified oligomers. By contrast, the phosphorothioate derivatives (S-ODNs) were found to inhibit replication of both influenza C virus. The antiviral effect of S-ODNs against influenza A virus was found at concentrations as low as 1.25 .mu.M and was present with mismatched oligomers. In the case of influenza C virus, the S-ODN complementary to the 3'' end of the viral RNA of the PB1 gene revealed a sequence-specific antiviral activity at a concentration of 20 .mu.M. (At the same concentration, S-ODNs with one or three mismatches showed little or no antiviral activity). Reduction in plaque number reached six logarithms when this sequence-specific S-ODN was used at a concentration of 80 .mu.M.