Background: Cidofovir (CDV) is an acyclic nucleoside phosphonate that exhibits a potent antiviral activity against several DNA viruses. In previous studies, CDV has been shown to significantly reduce the clinical severity and the viral shedding in primary caprine herpesvirus type-1 (CpHV-1) infection in goats. CpHV-1 is an alpha-herpesvirus showing many biological similarities with human herpesvirus type-2 (HHV-2); therefore, studies conducted on the CpHV-1 goat model could provide useful information on the pathogenesis, therapy and prevention of HHV-2 infection in humans.

Methods: CDV was administered to goats infected by vaginal route with CpHV-1. Real-time PCR was carried out on sacral ganglia from CpHV-1-infected goats to detect and quantify latent CpHV-1 DNA.

Results: Viral DNA was variably found in all five pairs of sacral ganglia, with a more frequent involvement of the third and fourth pair. In CDV-treated goats, the amount of CpHV-1 DNA did not appear to be related either to the severity of the clinical signs or the titre of the virus shed during primary CpHV-1 infection.

Conclusions: CDV failed to prevent CpHV-1 latency. Thus, vaginal CDV administration during primary herpesvirus infection, although providing immediate clinical benefits to the host might not influence the establishment of latency and, consequently, the rate of recurrent infections.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3851/IMP1611DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

caprine herpesvirus
8
herpesvirus type-1
8
cphv-1
8
sacral ganglia
8
goats
5
cdv
5
cidofovir prevent
4
prevent caprine
4
herpesvirus
4
type-1 neural
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!