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Abstract
Recombinant (r) human (hu) manganese (Mn) and copper-zinc (CuZn) superoxide dismutase
(SOD) were evaluated for their cytotoxicity and antiviral activity against respiratory
syncytial virus (RSV) in tissue culture and in cotton rats. No apparent cytotoxicity
or inhibition of RSV was observed in the tissue culture studies (both compounds had
IC50 and EC50 values > or = 1000 micrograms/ml and a selective index = 1). However,
significant reductions in mean pulmonary RSV titers (ranging between 0.5 and 1.9 log10/g
of lung compared with the mean pulmonary viral titers detected in similarly inoculated,
placebo-treated control animals) were seen in most of the experiments, in which experimentally
infected cotton rats were exposed to continuous small-particle aerosols (reservoir
concentrations > or = 20 mg/ml) containing either rhuMnSOD or rhuCuZnSOD. This protective
effect was dose dependent and not observed when either rSOD compound was administered
parenterally (intraperitoneally) or intranasally. No toxic effects were noted in any
of the cotton rats exposed to aerosols of either rhuMn or CuZnSOD; nor was any evidence
of drug-induced histopathology observed in sections of lung prepared from these animals.