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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 2002, p. 3356-3361, Vol. 46, No. 11
0066-4804/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.11.3356-3361.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Antivaccinia Activities of Acyclic Nucleoside Phosphonate Derivatives in Epithelial Cells and Organotypic Cultures
R. Snoeck,1* A. Hol
,2 C. Dewolf-Peeters,3 J. Van Den Oord,3 E. De Clercq,1 and G. Andrei1
Rega Institute for Medical Research, K.U. Leuven,1
Pathology Department, U.Z. Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium,3
Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, 16610 Prague 6, Czech Republic2
Received 12 October 2001/
Returned for modification 22 January 2002/
Accepted 17 July 2002

ABSTRACT
Organotypic "raft" cultures of epithelial cells allow the reconstitution
of a skin equivalent that is easily infectible with different
viruses with cutaneous tropism. Among these, poxvirus and particularly
vaccinia virus (VV) are good candidates for use in antiviral
tests, giving histological pictures comparable to those observed
in humans infected with smallpox. Therefore, we decided to evaluate
a series of phosphonate derivatives for their ability to inhibit
VV growth in epithelial cell monolayers, and the most powerful
derivatives were tested in the organotypic cultures. The most
active compound was 9-(S)-[3-hydroxy-2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]adenine
[(S)-HPMPA], followed by 9-(S)-[3-hydroxy-2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]-2,6-diaminopurine,
cyclic (S)-HPMPA, 9-(S)-[3-hydroxy-2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]cytosine
[(S)-HPMPC; cidofovir, Vistide], and cyclic (S)-HPMPC. Cidofovir,
which is on the market for the treatment of human cytomegalovirus
retinitis in immunocompromised patients, is potentially a good
candidate for the treatment of a poxvirus outbreak, in the absence
of any vaccination.

INTRODUCTION
Despite the global eradication of smallpox that led to the discontinuation
of vaccination against smallpox about 20 years ago, poxviruses
remain a serious health problem. Now that vaccination against
smallpox has been discontinued, younger generations are again
susceptible to the virus, which is a good candidate, if it is
ever released, as an agent for biological warfare or terrorism
(
3,
5,
14,
15). In addition, other poxviruses, such as monkeypox
virus, against which vaccination against smallpox offered protection,
are now potential pathogens for humans, as demonstrated by the
recent epidemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo (
16,
25).
Therefore, there is a need for continued study of poxviruses
to develop models in order to understand their pathogenicities
and to test more powerful drugs, since up to now no antiviral
drugs with satisfactory activities against poxviruses have been
available.
Here we present the results of a study with a broad range of acyclic nucleoside phosphonates (ANPs) whose activities were tested against vaccinia virus (VV) replication in vitro on epithelial cells both in monolayers and, for the most active ones, in the organotypic "raft" culture system. Organotypic raft cultures use human epithelial cells derived from neonatal foreskins and are able to mimic fully differentiated skin. Previously, organotypic raft cultures have successfully been used for the study of human papillomaviruses (23), and they have recently been applied to the study of herpes simplex virus type 1 infection (18, 33, 34) and adeno-associated virus type 2 (24). Since epithelial cells are the natural host cells for poxviruses, we decided to evaluate VV replication in such a system and use it as a model for evaluation of antiviral compounds. VV gives a histological image in epithelial raft cultures similar to that of cells from patients with clinical poxvirus infections. ANPs have been shown to have antipoxvirus activities (12, 20) both in vitro and in vivo.
Among the different molecules tested in our model, (S)-1-[3-hydroxy-2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]cytosine (HPMPC; cidofovir, Vistide; molecular weight, 315.32) emerged as the most promising molecule.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Culture of PHKs.
Primary human keratinocytes (PHKs) were isolated from neonatal
foreskins. Tissue fragments were incubated with trypsin-EDTA
for 1 h at 37°C. The epithelial cells were detached and
cultured with mitomycin-treated Swiss 3T3 J2 mouse fibroblasts
as feeders. The growth medium was a 1/3 mixture of Ham's F-12
and Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 0.5
µg of hydrocortisone per ml, 10 mg of epidermal growth
factor per ml, 10% fetal calf serum, 2 mmol of
L-glutamine per
liter, 10 mmol of HEPES per liter, 1 mmol of sodium pyruvate
per liter, 1
x 10
-10 mol of cholera toxin per liter, 5 µg
of insulin per ml, 5 µg of human transferrin per ml, and
15
x 10
-4 mg of 3,3',5-triiodo-2-thyronine per ml. PHKs were
grown as monolayers to test anti-VV activity, and they were
also used to prepare the organotypic raft cultures.
Virus.
Stocks of VV (VR-118, strain Lederle-Chorioallentoic; American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, Va.) were prepared in PHKs.
Compounds.
The different ANPs were synthesized by A. Hol
by procedures described in the literature (17). The compounds tested are listed in Table 1.
Antiviral assays.
Confluent PHKs grown in 96-well microtiter plates were infected
with VV at 100 CCID
50s (1 CCID
50 corresponds to the virus stock
dilution that is infective for 50% of the cell cultures). After
2 h of incubation at 37°C, residual virus was removed and
the infected cells were further incubated with medium containing
serial dilutions of the test compounds (in duplicate). After
24 to 48 h of incubation at 37°C in a 5% CO
2 atmosphere,
the viral cytopathic effect (CPE) was recorded and the 50% inhibitory
concentration (IC
50) was defined as the compound concentration
required to reduce the viral CPE by 50%. The IC
50 of each compound
represents the mean of the IC
50s from two or more experiments.
Cytotoxicity assays.
The toxicities of the compounds for the host cells were based on inhibition of cell growth. The cells were seeded at 6 x 103 cells per well in a volume of 0.1 ml into 96-well microtiter plates and allowed to proliferate for 24 h. Then, medium containing serial dilutions (in duplicate) of the test compounds was added (0.1 ml per well). After 3 days of incubation at 37°C in 5% CO2, the cells were trypsinized and the cell number was determined with a Coulter counter. Cytotoxicity is expressed as the 50% cytotoxic concentration (CC50) or the concentration required to reduce cell growth by 50% (relative to the number of cells in the untreated control cell cultures). The CC50 of each compound represents the mean of the CC50s from two or more experiments. The selectivity index (SI) is defined as the ratio of the CC50 for cell growth to the IC50 for viral plaque formation.
Organotypic cultures.
For the preparation of dermal equivalents, a collagen matrix solution was made with collagen mixed on ice with Ham's F-12 medium concentrated 10-fold, 10-fold reconstitution buffer, and 3T3 J2 fibroblasts. One milliliter of the collagen matrix solution was poured into 24-well plates. After equilibration of the gel with 1 ml of growth medium overnight at 37°C, 2.5 x 105 normal PHKs were seeded on the tops of the gels and maintained submerged for 24 to 48 h. The collagen rafts were raised and placed onto stainless steel grids at the interface between the air and the liquid culture medium (Fig. 1). The epithelial cells were then allowed to stratify for 10 to 12 days. The cultures were then harvested, fixed in 10% buffered formalin, and embedded in paraffin. Four-micrometer sections were stained with hematoxylin-eosin for histological examination.
Infection of organotypic cultures.
At different times after lifting of the rafts, organotypic cultures
were infected with 50 µl of the VV stock at the indicated
viral inoculum on the top of the in vitro-formed epithelium.
At the time of infection, the cultures were incubated in the
presence of medium containing different concentrations of the
test compounds.

RESULTS
The results for the antiviral activities of the different ANPs
on epithelial cell monolayers are summarized in Table
1. Among
the ANPs evaluated for their anti-VV activities in PHKs were
(S)-HPMPC (cidofovir, Vistide) and its cyclic prodrug cyclic
(S)-HPMPC, 9-(S)-[3-hydroxy-2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]-2,6-diaminopurine
[(S)-HPMPDAP], 9-(S)-[3-hydroxy-2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]adenine
[(S)-HPMPA] and its 3-deaza and 8-aza derivatives, as well as
selected 9-[2-(phosphonomethoxy)ethyl] derivatives of 9-[2-(phosphonomethoxy)ethyl]-2,6-diaminopurine
substituted at the N
6-amino group and selected ANP derivatives
of guanine. (S)-HPMPC (cidofovir, Vistide), (S)-HPMPDAP, (S)-HPMPA,
cyclic HPMPA, and cyclic 3-deaza-(S)-HPMPA emerged with the
highest SIs (SIs = 7.1 to 25.2), followed by 3-deaza-(S)-HPMPA
(SI = 4.9) and cyclic (S)-HPMPC (SI = 5.1). Some other HPMP
derivatives showed SIs in the range of 3 to 5, i.e., 9-(S)-[3-hydroxy-2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]guanine
and (RS)-3-azido-HPMPDAP. Except for 9-[2-(phosphonomethoxy)ethyl]-2-amino-6-
n-butylaminopurine,
with an SI of 4.7, none of the phosphonomethoxyethyl derivatives
selectively inhibited VV replication in PHKs.
As a rule, the SI was higher when selected drugs were tested in human embryonic lung (HEL) cells (data not shown) than when they were tested in PHKs, with the the difference being particularly marked for the (S)-HPMPA derivatives. The IC50s were generally comparable, but the compounds were systematically more toxic for the PHK cells. The most potent drugs on PHK monolayers were tested in epithelial raft cultures. This system is able to support infection with VV regardless of when the cells are infected at different stages of differentiation. The results obtained are shown in Fig. 2 and compared to those for the uninfected, well-differentiated epithelial raft culture. The cytopathogenic effects obtained and revealed by hematoxylin-eosin staining are characteristic of those seen in clinical lesions induced by poxviruses, i.e., the presence of inclusion bodies.
When the epithelial raft cultures were infected with VV at an
input of 1,800 PFU/raft, after 6 days of differentiation, total
destruction of the different layers of the epithelia was observed
all along the raft (Fig.
3). Treatment of cultures with (S)-HPMPC
at 40 µg/ml or (S)-HPMPA at 10 µg/ml resulted in
complete protection against VV-induced CPE, while treatment
with HPMPC at 10 µg/ml or HPMPA at 4 and 1 µg/ml
resulted in partial protection (Fig.
3 and data not shown).
Lower concentrations of (S)-HPMPC and (S)-HPMPA were not effective
under those culture conditions. If infection with 720 PFU/raft
was performed after 8 days of differentiation, only a low number
of individual viral plaques were noted in raft cultures treated
with (S)-HPMPC at 10 µg/ml, and partial protection was
also observed at a concentration of 4 µg/ml (data not
shown). Under the same culture conditions, treatment with HPMPA
at concentrations of 10 and 4 µg/ml and HPMPDAP at concentrations
of 40, 10, and 4 µg/ml resulted in full protection against
VV-induced cytopathogenicity, whereas both drugs at 1 µg/ml
partially protected the organotypic raft cultures (data not
shown).

DISCUSSION
Smallpox, which was eradicated by global vaccination, is the
first and only human infectious disease that has disappeared
from the surface of the planet. The success of the World Health
Organization eradication campaign, which was started in the
18th century by Jenner, has lowered the amount of attention
given to the potential pathogenic roles that other poxviruses
could play, such as monkeypox virus. In addition, there are
strong concerns about the potential release of nondeclared smallpox
strains as a weapon by bioterrorists (
3,
5,
14,
15). Therefore,
the World Health Organization recommended further studies on
poxviruses, mostly smallpox virus, in anticipation of complete
destruction of the two official stocks in the United States
and Russia, that was foreseen in 2002, in order to improve our
scientific knowledge based on the use of molecular techniques
on the one hand and to establish reliable therapeutic strategies
in case of virus release on the other.
In addition to the development of new vaccines and improvements in diagnostic techniques, the development of antiviral drugs with high SIs is also recommended. Several families of compounds have been tested, mostly in the VV model, and most of those that have been identified as anti-VV agents are nucleoside analogues: IMP dehydrogenase inhibitors, S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase inhibitors, outer membrane protein decarboxylase inhibitors, CTP synthase inhibitors, thymidylate synthase inhibitors, or ANPs (9, 10, 12). (S)-HPMPA can be seen as the lead compound of this last class of compounds. While the structurally related compounds 9-(S)-(2,3-dihydroxypropyl)adenine and phosphonoacetic acid inhibit the replication of VV in primary rabbit kidney cells at IC50s of 20 and 30 µg/ml, respectively, (S)-HPMPA does so at a 100-fold lower concentration, that is, 0.3 µg/ml (12). (S)-HPMPA exhibits a broad-spectrum antiviral activity against DNA viruses, including poxviruses, but also adeno-, herpes-, hepadna-, and iridoviruses (8, 9). (S)-HPMPC (cidofovir, Vistide), the cytosine counterpart of (S)-HPMPA, shows a similar spectrum of activity but proved to be less toxic than the mother compound both in vitro and in vivo (1, 2, 32). Cidofovir has been licensed for the treatment of cytomegalovirus retinitis in AIDS patients, but it also has therapeutic potential by either systemic or topical administration in the treatment of various other herpes-, polyoma-, papilloma-, adeno-, and poxvirus infections (28). Cidofovir confers a pronounced and prolonged inhibition of viral replication that lasts for at least 7 days after treatment with the drug as short as 6 h postinfection. The long-lasting antiviral action is a unique property of cidofovir that allows prophylactic and infrequent dosing of the drug (8, 9, 11, 12).
Poxviruses have an obvious tropism for skin and mucosa, and therefore, we decided to try to infect PHKs with VV. CPEs were easily obtained in a few days, and antiviral assays could be performed, with the assays showing IC50s comparable to those measured by other assays performed initially with HEL fibroblasts. The cytotoxicity measured for PHKs was systematically slightly higher than that measured for HEL cells, making the SI lower for PHKs. Identical CPEs were obtained in infected epithelial raft cultures. The kinetics of infection at different stages of differentiation have shown that the best conditions were obtained when the raft was infected between 6 and 8 days postinfection, with the fixation of the tissue being performed 12 to 14 days after the beginning of differentiation. Different concentrations of the most active phosphonates were added to the medium and showed inhibition of virus growth at concentrations comparable to those observed in the monolayer system. Cidofovir could be used at a concentration as high as 40 µg/ml, while (S)-HPMPA was not toxic at a concentration of about 10 µg/ml. At these concentrations, both drugs were able to afford complete protection against VV-induced CPE in the raft culture system, while both cidofovir and (S)-HPMPA at concentrations of 10 and 4 µg/ml, respectively, were only partially protective. It should be noted that although it is not possible to calculate IC50s in the raft culture model, the order of potency of the different ANPs observed in the organotypic raft culture system correlated with the IC50s obtained with PHK monolayers.
Recently, several reports have stressed the clinical usefulness of cidofovir for the treatment of poxvirus infections in humans (6, 7, 22). Topical or systemic cidofovir has been shown to be active for the treatment of mollusca contagiosa, which are caused by a poxvirus and which can be responsible for severe disease, particularly in immunocompromised patients. Furthermore, we have recently seen a particularly severe case of orf, also known as ecthyma contagiosum (which is caused by a member of the poxvirus family) that completely regressed under local cidofovir treatment (13). ANPs, particularly cidofovir, are good candidates for the treatment and the prophylaxis of poxvirus infections, based on the efficiency of cidofovir against cowpox virus, monkeypox virus, and VV infections in animal models (4, 10, 19, 21, 27, 30, 31; J. W. Huggins, D. Smee, M. J. Martinez, and M. Bray, Abstr. Eleventh Int. Conf. Antivir. Res., Antivir. Res. 37:A73, 1998.) and the results of clinical case reports (6, 7, 13, 22). Cidofovir could also be used in combination with other antiviral drugs with different molecular targets in order to synergize the activities and to minimize the emergence of resistant viruses. Recently, treatment of cowpox virus respiratory infection in mice with a combination of cidofovir and ribavirin was reported (29).
Organotypic cultures are powerful tools not only because they provide a histological picture similar to that observed in vivo for the viruses with a tropism for the skin but also because for one given experimental condition, several parameters (cellular and viral) can be studied by different techniques. It is also possible to resuspend the cells in order to quantify some parameters by flow cytometry.
Our results obtained with the organotypic epithelial raft culture model confirmed results previously obtained in vitro (26) and in vivo (4, 10, 19, 26; Huggins et al., Abstr. Eleventh Int. Conf. Antivir. Res.), demonstrating the activity of cidofovir against the poxvirus class of viruses. The monolayer cell system could be used to screen new molecules since these cells represent the natural host for poxviruses. The raft culture will help to confirm, visualize, and analyze antiviral activities. The use of epithelial cells to evaluate antiviral drugs is complementary to the existing models, with none of them giving activities 100% similar to those obtained in a surrogate model when antivariola activity is concerned.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Anita Camps, Lies Van den Heurck, and Steven Carmans
for fine technical support; C. Callebaut and I. Aerts for dedicated
editorial help; and Marc Van Ranst for improving the English
language.
This study was performed as a part of a research project of the Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry (project 4055905). It was supported by a grant from the Czech State Grant Agency (grant 203/96/K001).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Rega Institute for Medical Research, K.U. Leuven, Minderbroedersstraat 10, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium. Phone: 32/16-337341. Fax: 32/16-337340. E-mail:
robert.snoeck{at}rega.kuleuven.ac.be.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 2002, p. 3356-3361, Vol. 46, No. 11
0066-4804/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.11.3356-3361.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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