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Single amino acid substitutions in the HSV-1 helicase protein that confer resistance to the helicase-primase inhibitor BAY 57-1293 are associated with increased or decreased virus growth characteristics in tissue culture

Version 2 2024-03-13, 09:36
Version 1 2023-10-29, 20:28
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 09:36 authored by Subhajit Biswas, Lyn Jennens, Hugh J. Field
<p>Two mutants (BAYr1 and BAYr2) that are 100-fold and >3000-fold resistant, respectively, to the helicase-primase inhibitor (HPI) BAY 57-1293 were derived from a plaque-pure parental strain, HSV-1 SC16 cl-2. BAYr1 has two substitutions in the HSV-1 helicase (UL5) protein (A4 to V; K356 to Q) and BAYr2 has one (G352 to R). It was shown reproducibly that BAYr1 grows to higher titres in tissue culture while BAYr2 grows more slowly than wild-type. Marker transfer experiments confirmed that K356Q and G352R are the drug-resistance mutations and that they are directly associated with differences in virus growth in tissue culture. When BAYr1 was tested in a murine infection model, this virus was shown to be fully pathogenic. We present evidence that single mutations close to a predicted functional domain of an essential HSV-1 replication enzyme (helicase) are associated with drug resistance and virus growth characteristics.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Archives of Virology

Volume

152

Issue

8

Pages/Article Number

1489-1500

Publisher

Springer

ISSN

0304-8608

eISSN

1432-8798

Date Submitted

2013-05-10

Date Accepted

2013-05-10

Date of First Publication

2013-05-10

Date of Final Publication

2013-05-10

ePrints ID

9378

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