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Inhibition of HSV-1 ocular infection with morpholino oligomers targeting ICP0 and ICP27

Authors: 
Moerdyk-Schauwecker M, Stein DA, Eide K, Blouch RE, Bildfell R, Iversen P, Jin L
Citation: 
Antiviral Res. 2009 Nov;84(2):131-41. Epub 2009 Aug 7.
Abstract: 
Alternative therapies are needed for HSV-1 infections in patients refractory to treatment with Acyclovir (ACV) and its derivatives. Peptide-conjugated phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PPMO) are single-stranded DNA analogues that enter cells readily and reduce target gene expression through steric blockage of complementary RNA. PPMO targeting the translation start-site regions of HSV-1 ICP0 or ICP27 mRNA before or soon after infection reduced HSV-1 plaque formation by 70-98% in vitro. The ICP0 PPMO also reduced ACV-resistant HSV-1 (strain 615.9) plaque formation by 70-90%, while an equivalent dose of ACV produced only 40-50% inhibition when the treatment was applied between 1 and 3hpi. Seven daily treatments of 100mug ICP0 PPMO caused no gross or microscopic damage to the corneas of uninfected mice. Topical application of 10mug ICP0 PPMO to the eyes of HSV-1 infected mice reduced the incidence of eye disease by 37.5-50% compared to controls. This study demonstrates that topically applied PPMO holds promise as an antiviral drug candidate against HSV-1 ocular infection.
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: Rabbit skin (RS) cells, Vero cells
Delivery Method: 
peptide-coupled