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Identification and Pathogenic Potential of Orofacial Herpetic Clinical Isolates in Northeast Mexico

Received: 18 September 2020    Accepted: 5 October 2020    Published: 13 October 2020
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Abstract

Background Herpes simplex viruses 1 (human herpes virus types 1, HSV-1) often cause recurrent infections that affect the skin, mouth, lips, and eyes and eventually induce herpetic encephalitis. A high percentage of the population is infected with HSV-1 in which it produces a variety of these orofacial disease. In Mexico, there are no studies to determine the effects of viral virulence of clinical facial dermal isolates of active infections caused by the Herpes simplex virus 1. Objective of this work was to compare the herpetic activity of human clinical isolates from northeast Mexico against HSV-1 KOS as reference strain, which induces experimental murine model keratitis disease produced by infecting mouse corneas. Methods and Materials we compared several clinical isolate of HSV-1 obtained from 25 patients diagnosed with HSV-1 active, according to acyclovir (ACV) susceptibility, thymidine kinase (TK) polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and experimental Balb/c mice model as viral infections in vivo were evaluated. Results we found that several clinical isolates showed ACV resistance (48%) and pathogenic potential (PP) differences that caused ocular infection more or less than reference HSV-1 KOS strain. In Conclusion, some clinical isolate from northeast Mexico shown differences that caused ocular infection more or less than reference HSV-1 KOS strain.

Published in International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medical Sciences (Volume 6, Issue 5)
DOI 10.11648/j.ijcems.20200605.12
Page(s) 91-95
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Herpes Simplex Virus, Virulence, Experimental Model, Clinical Isolates, Acyclovir, Northeast Mexico

References
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[4] Al-Dujaili LJ, Clerkin PP, Clement C, McFerrin HE, Bhattacharjee PS, Varnell ED, et al. Ocular herpes simplex virus: how are latency, reactivation, recurrent disease and therapy interrelated? Future microbiology. 2011; 6 (8): 877-907. Epub 2011/08/25.
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[6] Koskiniemi M, Piiparinen H, Mannonen L, Rantalaiho T, Vaheri A. Herpes encephalitis is a disease of middle aged and elderly people: polymerase chain reaction for detection of herpes simplex virus in the CSF of 516 patients with encephalitis. The Study Group. Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry. 1996; 60 (2): 174-8. Epub 1996/02/01.
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[11] Kolb AW, Schmidt TR, Dyer DW, Brandt CR. Sequence variation in the herpes simplex virus U (S) 1 ocular virulence determinant. Investigative ophthalmology & visual science. 2011; 52 (7): 4630-8. Epub 2011/04/27.
[12] Morrison LA, Da Costa XJ, Knipe DM. Influence of mucosal and parenteral immunization with a replication-defective mutant of HSV-2 on immune responses and protection from genital challenge. Virology. 1998; 243 (1): 178-87. Epub 1998/04/07.
[13] Morrison LA, Knipe DM. Immunization with replication-defective mutants of herpes simplex virus type 1: sites of immune intervention in pathogenesis of challenge virus infection. Journal of virology. 1994; 68 (2): 689-96. Epub 1994/02/01.
[14] Korteweg C, Gu J. Pathology, molecular biology, and pathogenesis of avian influenza A (H5N1) infection in humans. The American journal of pathology. 2008; 172 (5): 1155-70. Epub 2008/04/12.
[15] Bowen CD, Renner DW, Shreve JT, Tafuri Y, Payne KM, Dix RD, et al. Viral forensic genomics reveals the relatedness of classic herpes simplex virus strains KOS, KOS63, and KOS79. Virology. 2016; 492: 179-86. Epub 2016/03/08.
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    Cynthia Mendoza-Rodriguez, Jorge Ocampo-Candiani, Pilar Morales-San Claudio, Osvaldo Vazquez-Martinez, Mauricio Salinas-Santander, et al. (2020). Identification and Pathogenic Potential of Orofacial Herpetic Clinical Isolates in Northeast Mexico. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medical Sciences, 6(5), 91-95. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcems.20200605.12

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    ACS Style

    Cynthia Mendoza-Rodriguez; Jorge Ocampo-Candiani; Pilar Morales-San Claudio; Osvaldo Vazquez-Martinez; Mauricio Salinas-Santander, et al. Identification and Pathogenic Potential of Orofacial Herpetic Clinical Isolates in Northeast Mexico. Int. J. Clin. Exp. Med. Sci. 2020, 6(5), 91-95. doi: 10.11648/j.ijcems.20200605.12

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    AMA Style

    Cynthia Mendoza-Rodriguez, Jorge Ocampo-Candiani, Pilar Morales-San Claudio, Osvaldo Vazquez-Martinez, Mauricio Salinas-Santander, et al. Identification and Pathogenic Potential of Orofacial Herpetic Clinical Isolates in Northeast Mexico. Int J Clin Exp Med Sci. 2020;6(5):91-95. doi: 10.11648/j.ijcems.20200605.12

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ijcems.20200605.12,
      author = {Cynthia Mendoza-Rodriguez and Jorge Ocampo-Candiani and Pilar Morales-San Claudio and Osvaldo Vazquez-Martinez and Mauricio Salinas-Santander and Ernesto Torres-Lopez},
      title = {Identification and Pathogenic Potential of Orofacial Herpetic Clinical Isolates in Northeast Mexico},
      journal = {International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medical Sciences},
      volume = {6},
      number = {5},
      pages = {91-95},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ijcems.20200605.12},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijcems.20200605.12},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijcems.20200605.12},
      abstract = {Background Herpes simplex viruses 1 (human herpes virus types 1, HSV-1) often cause recurrent infections that affect the skin, mouth, lips, and eyes and eventually induce herpetic encephalitis. A high percentage of the population is infected with HSV-1 in which it produces a variety of these orofacial disease. In Mexico, there are no studies to determine the effects of viral virulence of clinical facial dermal isolates of active infections caused by the Herpes simplex virus 1. Objective of this work was to compare the herpetic activity of human clinical isolates from northeast Mexico against HSV-1 KOS as reference strain, which induces experimental murine model keratitis disease produced by infecting mouse corneas. Methods and Materials we compared several clinical isolate of HSV-1 obtained from 25 patients diagnosed with HSV-1 active, according to acyclovir (ACV) susceptibility, thymidine kinase (TK) polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and experimental Balb/c mice model as viral infections in vivo were evaluated. Results we found that several clinical isolates showed ACV resistance (48%) and pathogenic potential (PP) differences that caused ocular infection more or less than reference HSV-1 KOS strain. In Conclusion, some clinical isolate from northeast Mexico shown differences that caused ocular infection more or less than reference HSV-1 KOS strain.},
     year = {2020}
    }
    

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    T1  - Identification and Pathogenic Potential of Orofacial Herpetic Clinical Isolates in Northeast Mexico
    AU  - Cynthia Mendoza-Rodriguez
    AU  - Jorge Ocampo-Candiani
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    AB  - Background Herpes simplex viruses 1 (human herpes virus types 1, HSV-1) often cause recurrent infections that affect the skin, mouth, lips, and eyes and eventually induce herpetic encephalitis. A high percentage of the population is infected with HSV-1 in which it produces a variety of these orofacial disease. In Mexico, there are no studies to determine the effects of viral virulence of clinical facial dermal isolates of active infections caused by the Herpes simplex virus 1. Objective of this work was to compare the herpetic activity of human clinical isolates from northeast Mexico against HSV-1 KOS as reference strain, which induces experimental murine model keratitis disease produced by infecting mouse corneas. Methods and Materials we compared several clinical isolate of HSV-1 obtained from 25 patients diagnosed with HSV-1 active, according to acyclovir (ACV) susceptibility, thymidine kinase (TK) polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and experimental Balb/c mice model as viral infections in vivo were evaluated. Results we found that several clinical isolates showed ACV resistance (48%) and pathogenic potential (PP) differences that caused ocular infection more or less than reference HSV-1 KOS strain. In Conclusion, some clinical isolate from northeast Mexico shown differences that caused ocular infection more or less than reference HSV-1 KOS strain.
    VL  - 6
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Author Information
  • Dermatology Service, Faculty of Medicine and Dr. Jose Eleuterio Gonzalez University Hospital, Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, Nuevo León, Mexico

  • Dermatology Service, Faculty of Medicine and Dr. Jose Eleuterio Gonzalez University Hospital, Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, Nuevo León, Mexico

  • Microbiology Department, Center of Specialized Laboratories, Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, Nuevo Leon, Mexico

  • Dermatology Service, Faculty of Medicine and Dr. Jose Eleuterio Gonzalez University Hospital, Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, Nuevo León, Mexico

  • Research Department, Faculty of Medicine, Autonomous University of Coahuila, Saltillo Coahuila, Mexico

  • Immunovirology Laboratory, Department of Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, Nuevo Leon, Mexico

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