4.6 Article

Influence of Ribavirin on Mumps Virus Population Diversity

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13122535

Keywords

mumps virus; mutagenesis; virus population diversity; genetic variability; ribavirin

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The frequent mumps outbreaks in vaccinated populations and the occurrence of neurological complications indicate the need for more efficient vaccines and specific antiviral therapies. Ribavirin has been shown to induce mutations in the mumps virus genome without developing resistance in long-term exposure.
Frequent mumps outbreaks in vaccinated populations and the occurrence of neurological complications (e.g., aseptic meningitis or encephalitis) in patients with mumps indicate the need for the development of more efficient vaccines as well as specific antiviral therapies. RNA viruses are genetically highly heterogeneous populations that exist on the edge of an error threshold, such that additional increases in mutational burden can lead to extinction of the virus population. Deliberate modulation of their natural mutation rate is being exploited as an antiviral strategy and a possibility for rational vaccine design. The aim of this study was to examine the ability of ribavirin, a broad-spectrum antiviral agent, to introduce mutations in the mumps virus (MuV) genome and to investigate if resistance develops during long-term in vitro exposure to ribavirin. An increase in MuV population heterogeneity in the presence of ribavirin has been observed after one passage in cell culture, as well as a bias toward C-to-U and G-to-A transitions, which have previously been defined as ribavirin-related. At higher ribavirin concentration, MuV loses its infectivity during serial passaging and does not recover. At low ribavirin concentration, serial passaging leads to a more significant increase in population diversity and a stronger bias towards ribavirin-related transitions, independently of viral strain or cell culture. In these conditions, the virus retains its initial growth capacity, without development of resistance at a whole-virus population level.

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