Litcius/Paper detail

Surveillance for feline herpesvirus type 1 mutation and development of resistance in cats treated with antiviral medications

Andrew C. Lewin, Nikole E. Ineck, Melanie A. Mironovich, Morgan E. Marino, Chin‐Chi Liu, Ugochi Emelogu, Erinn P. Mills, Pilar Camacho‐Luna, Renee T. Carter

2023Frontiers in Veterinary Science18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Feline herpesvirus type 1 (FHV-1) commonly causes ocular surface disease in cats and is treated with antiviral medications targeting viral DNA polymerase (UL30/42). Herein, we describe a method to assess the FHV-1 genome for mutation development and to assess the functional impact of mutations, if present. Fourteen shelter-housed domestic cats with FHV-1 ocular surface disease were assigned to one of four treatment groups: placebo ( n = 3), cidofovir 0.5% ophthalmic solution ( n = 3), famciclovir oral solution ( n = 5), or ganciclovir 0.15% ophthalmic solution ( n = 3). Swabs were collected before (day 1) and after (day 8) 1 week of twice-daily treatments to isolate viable FHV-1. Viral DNA was extracted for sequencing using Illumina MiSeq with subsequent genomic variant detection between paired day 1 and day 8 isolates. Plaque reduction assay was performed on paired isolates demonstrating non-synonymous variants. A total of 171 synonymous and 3 non-synonymous variants were identified in day 8 isolates. No variants were detected in viral UL23, UL30, or UL42 genes. Variant totals were not statistically different in animals receiving antiviral or placebo ( p = 0.4997). A day 8 isolate from each antiviral treatment group contained a single non-synonymous variant in ICP4 (transcriptional regulator). These 3 isolates demonstrated no evidence of functional antiviral resistance when IC 50 was assessed. Most (10/14 pairs) day 1 and 8 viral isolate pairs from the same host animal were near-identical. While functional variants were not detected in this small sample, these techniques can be replicated to assess FHV-1 isolates suspected of having developed resistance to antiviral medications.

Topics & Concepts

CATSVirologyMutationBiologyMedicineVeterinary medicineGeneticsInternal medicineGeneHerpesvirus Infections and TreatmentsVirus-based gene therapy researchCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research
Surveillance for feline herpesvirus type 1 mutation and development of resistance in cats treated with antiviral medications | Litcius