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Journal of Virology, August 2001, p. 7184-7187, Vol. 75, No. 15
Department of Virology, UPRES EA 2387,
Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital,1
and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics,
Institut Pasteur,2 Paris, France
Received 17 April 2000/Accepted 23 April 2001
Human foamy virus (HFV), a retrovirus of simian origin which
occasionally infects humans, is the basis of retroviral vectors in
development for gene therapy. Clinical considerations of how to treat
patients developing an uncontrolled infection by either HFV or
HFV-based vectors need to be raised. We determined the susceptibility
of the HFV to dideoxynucleosides and found that only zidovudine was
equally efficient against the replication of human immunodeficiency
virus type 1 (HIV-1) and HFV. By contrast, zalcitabine (ddC),
lamivudine (3TC), stavudine (d4T), and didanosine (ddI) were 3-, 3-, 30-, and 46-fold less efficient against HFV than against HIV-1,
respectively. Some amino acid residues known to be involved in HIV-1
resistance to ddC, 3TC, d4T, and ddI were found at homologous positions
of HFV reverse transcriptase (RT). These critical amino acids are
located at the same positions in the three-dimensional structure of
HIV-1 and HFV RT, suggesting that both enzymes share common patterns of inhibition.
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.15.7184-7187.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Efficacy of Dideoxynucleosides against Human Foamy
Virus and Relationship to Its Reverse Transcriptase Amino Acid
Sequence and Structure
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Virology, CERVI, Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, 47-83
Bd. de l'Hôpital, 75651 Paris Cedex 13, France. Phone: 33 1 42 17 74 01. Fax: 33 1 42 17 74 11. E-mail:
vincent.calvez{at}psl.ap-hop-paris.fr.
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