Viruses (Jan 2014)

Molecular and Biological Characterization of a New Isolate of Guinea Pig Cytomegalovirus

  • Mark R. Schleiss,
  • Shane McAllister,
  • Anibal G. Armién,
  • Nelmary Hernandez-Alvarado,
  • Claudia Fernández-Alarcón,
  • Jason C. Zabeli,
  • Thiruvarangan Ramaraj,
  • John A. Crow,
  • Michael A. McVoy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v6020448
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 448 – 475

Abstract

Read online

Development of a vaccine against congenital infection with human cytomegalovirus is complicated by the issue of re-infection, with subsequent vertical transmission, in women with pre-conception immunity to the virus. The study of experimental therapeutic prevention of re-infection would ideally be undertaken in a small animal model, such as the guinea pig cytomegalovirus (GPCMV) model, prior to human clinical trials. However, the ability to model re-infection in the GPCMV model has been limited by availability of only one strain of virus, the 22122 strain, isolated in 1957. In this report, we describe the isolation of a new GPCMV strain, the CIDMTR strain. This strain demonstrated morphological characteristics of a typical Herpesvirinae by electron microscopy. Illumina and PacBio sequencing demonstrated a genome of 232,778 nt. Novel open reading frames ORFs not found in reference strain 22122 included an additional MHC Class I homolog near the right genome terminus. The CIDMTR strain was capable of dissemination in immune compromised guinea pigs, and was found to be capable of congenital transmission in GPCMV-immune dams previously infected with salivary gland‑adapted strain 22122 virus. The availability of a new GPCMV strain should facilitate study of re-infection in this small animal model.

Keywords