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    Virology. 2003 Nov 25;316(2):191-201.

    Clinical isolates of GB virus type C vary in their ability to persist and replicate in peripheral blood mononuclear cell cultures.

    Source

    Departments of Internal Medicine and Research, Iowa City VA Medical Center, University of Iowa, and the Helen C. Levitt Center for Viral Pathogenesis, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.

    Abstract

    GB virus C/hepatitis G virus (GBV-C) replication in vitro is inefficient and inconsistent. In this study, clinical isolates of GBV-C were evaluated using peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) based culture methods. Isolates varied consistently in their ability to persistently replicate, and yield increased in cells grown without PHA/IL-2 stimulation. The deduced polyprotein sequence of an isolate that replicated well was determined (GenBank AY196904) and compared to 20 full-length GBV-C sequences. Fourteen of the 16 unique amino acid polymorphisms identified were in the coding regions for nonstructural proteins associated with interferon resistance and RNA replication. These data indicate that clinical GBV-C isolates vary in their ability to persist in culture, do not require PHA/IL-2 stimulation, and that sequence variability in key regulatory regions may affect growth in PBMC cultures. Since GBV-C appears to inhibit HIV replication in a coinfection model, these studies should facilitate determination of the mechanism of this interaction.

    PMID:
    14644602
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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