1. Seminal Plasma Reduces the Effectiveness of Topical Polyanionic Microbicides.
- Author
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Patel, Sarju, Hazrati, Ehsan, Cheshenko, Natalia, Galen, Benjamin, Heyi Yang, Esmeralda Guzman, Rong Wang, Herold, Betsy C., and Keller, Marla J.
- Subjects
SEMINAL proteins ,HERPES simplex virus ,HERPESVIRUSES ,HERPESVIRUS diseases ,SKIN infections ,MASS spectrometry - Abstract
The objective of this study was to test the activity of microbicides against herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) introduced in seminal plasma. We found that seminal plasma interfered with the activity of PRO 2000 and of cellulose sulfate, increasing by 100-fold the concentration of drug required to inhibit 90% of viral plaque formation. Seminal plasma competitively inhibited binding of the microbicides to the HSV-2 envelope. Most of the interference was found in a high molecular-weight fraction; tandem mass spectrometry identified the proteins as fibronectin-1 and lactoferrin. In a murine model, the interference translated in vivo into a loss in protection. We found that 2% PRO 2000 gel protected 100% of mice challenged intravaginally with HSV-2 introduced in PBS, whereas only 55% of mice were protected if virus was introduced in seminal plasma (P = .0007, log rank test). If these findings are reflective of what occurs in humans, modifications to microbicides to ensure that they retain activity in the presence of seminal plasma are indicated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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