Publication | Open Access
Genetic Characterization of Thymidine Kinase from Acyclovir‐Resistant and ‐Susceptible Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 Isolated from Bone Marrow Transplant Recipients
104
Citations
15
References
2000
Year
TransplantationMolecular VirologyResistant IsolatesNeurovirologyPathogenesisImmunologyHerpes Simplex VirusPathologyVirologyHerpesvirusesGenetic CharacterizationAmino Acid SubstitutionsResistance Mutation (Virology)HivThymidine KinaseMedicineViral GeneticsHerpes Simplex Virus Vaccines
Emergence of acyclovir (Acy)-resistant herpes simplex virus (HSV) is a major concern in bone marrow transplant recipients. Phenotypic and genetic characterization of thymidine kinase (TK) was done for 7 Acy-susceptible and 11 Acy-resistant HSV-1 isolated from 11 patients. In total, 19 amino acid substitutions were detected that were not related to Acy resistance but to TK gene polymorphism, including 5 mutations that have not been previously reported. The Acy-resistant strain from 1 patient presented no TK gene mutation related to resistance. Five patients (45%) had isolates that harbored point mutations leading to amino acid substitutions that could be associated with Acy resistance. Of the 5 substitutions detected, 3 have not been previously reported (codons 51, 83, and 175). A nucleotide insertion or deletion was detected in resistant isolates from 5 patients (45%); these mutations are located in homopolymer repeats at codon 92 (1 subject) and at codon 146 (4 subjects).
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