volume 78 issue 7 pages 3663-3674

VP1 Sequencing of All Human Rhinovirus Serotypes:Insights into Genus Phylogeny and Susceptibility to AntiviralCapsid-BindingCompounds

Rebecca M Ledford 1
Nitesh R Patel 1
Tina M Demenczuk 1
Adiba Watanyar 1
Torsten Herbertz 1
Marc S. Collett 1
Daniel C Pevear 1
1
 
ViroPharma, Inc., Exton, Pennsylvania 19341
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2004-04-09
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR1.283
CiteScore7.8
Impact factor3.8
ISSN0022538X, 10985514
Microbiology
Immunology
Insect Science
Virology
Abstract
ABSTRACT

Rhinoviruses are the most common infectious agents of humans. They are the principal etiologic agents of afebrile viral upper-respiratory-tract infections (the common cold). Human rhinoviruses (HRVs) comprise a genus within the family Picornaviridae . There are >100 serotypically distinct members of this genus. In order to better understand their phylogenetic relationship, the nucleotide sequence for the major surface protein of the virus capsid, VP1, was determined for all known HRV serotypes and one untyped isolate (HRV-Hanks). Phylogenetic analysis of deduced amino acid sequence data support previous studies subdividing the genus into two species containing all but one HRV serotype (HRV-87). Seventy-five HRV serotypes and HRV-Hanks belong to species HRV-A, and twenty-five HRV serotypes belong to species HRV-B. Located within VP1 is a hydrophobic pocket into which small-molecule antiviral compounds such as pleconaril bind and inhibit functions associated with the virus capsid. Analyses of the amino acids that constitute this pocket indicate that the sequence correlates strongly with virus susceptibility to pleconaril inhibition. Further, amino acid changes observed in reduced susceptibility variant viruses recovered from patients enrolled in clinical trials with pleconaril were distinct from those that confer natural phenotypic resistance to the drug. These observations suggest that it is possible to differentiate rhinoviruses naturally resistant to capsid function inhibitors from those that emerge from susceptible virus populations as a result of antiviral drug selection pressure based on sequence analysis of the drug-binding pocket.

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GOST Copy
Ledford R. M. et al. VP1 Sequencing of All Human Rhinovirus Serotypes:Insights into Genus Phylogeny and Susceptibility to AntiviralCapsid-BindingCompounds // Journal of Virology. 2004. Vol. 78. No. 7. pp. 3663-3674.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Ledford R. M., Patel N. R., Demenczuk T. M., Watanyar A., Herbertz T., Collett M. S., Pevear D. C. VP1 Sequencing of All Human Rhinovirus Serotypes:Insights into Genus Phylogeny and Susceptibility to AntiviralCapsid-BindingCompounds // Journal of Virology. 2004. Vol. 78. No. 7. pp. 3663-3674.
RIS |
Cite this
RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1128/jvi.78.7.3663-3674.2004
UR - https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.78.7.3663-3674.2004
TI - VP1 Sequencing of All Human Rhinovirus Serotypes:Insights into Genus Phylogeny and Susceptibility to AntiviralCapsid-BindingCompounds
T2 - Journal of Virology
AU - Ledford, Rebecca M
AU - Patel, Nitesh R
AU - Demenczuk, Tina M
AU - Watanyar, Adiba
AU - Herbertz, Torsten
AU - Collett, Marc S.
AU - Pevear, Daniel C
PY - 2004
DA - 2004/04/09
PB - American Society for Microbiology
SP - 3663-3674
IS - 7
VL - 78
PMID - 15016887
SN - 0022-538X
SN - 1098-5514
ER -
BibTex |
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2004_Ledford,
author = {Rebecca M Ledford and Nitesh R Patel and Tina M Demenczuk and Adiba Watanyar and Torsten Herbertz and Marc S. Collett and Daniel C Pevear},
title = {VP1 Sequencing of All Human Rhinovirus Serotypes:Insights into Genus Phylogeny and Susceptibility to AntiviralCapsid-BindingCompounds},
journal = {Journal of Virology},
year = {2004},
volume = {78},
publisher = {American Society for Microbiology},
month = {apr},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.78.7.3663-3674.2004},
number = {7},
pages = {3663--3674},
doi = {10.1128/jvi.78.7.3663-3674.2004}
}
MLA
Cite this
MLA Copy
Ledford, Rebecca M., et al. “VP1 Sequencing of All Human Rhinovirus Serotypes:Insights into Genus Phylogeny and Susceptibility to AntiviralCapsid-BindingCompounds.” Journal of Virology, vol. 78, no. 7, Apr. 2004, pp. 3663-3674. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.78.7.3663-3674.2004.