1. Infection with transfusion-transmitted virus (TTV) in humans and other primates in Venezuela
- Author
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E. Mejías, Ferdinando Liprandi, Flor H. Pujol, J.M. Pernalete, Juan E. Ludert, and Carmen L. Loureiro
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Untranslated region ,Genotype ,Rural Health ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Virus ,Transfusion transmitted virus ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Circoviridae Infections ,Phylogeny ,Aged ,Torque teno virus ,Hepatitis ,Genetic diversity ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Indians, South American ,Primate Diseases ,Middle Aged ,Venezuela ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,DNA, Viral ,Female ,Parasitology ,Viral disease - Abstract
Tranfusion-transmitted virus (TTV), a single-stranded circular DNA virus that chronically infects humans and other animals, displays a high degree of genetic diversity and was originally thought to be associated with hepatitis. The prevalences of TTV infection among different populations of humans and non-human primates from Venezuela have now been evaluated, using serum samples and three different detection tests. All three tests were PCR-based, one involving a hemi-nested PCR and primers based on the N22 open-reading-frame-1 region (N22-PCR), another employing 55 cycles with primers from the more conserved untranslated region (UTR-PCR), and the other using a hemi-nested PCR with primers from the same region (HUTR-PCR). The overall prevalences of human infection appeared much higher with the HUTR-PCR (52%) than with the N22-PCR (13%) or the UTR-PCR (5%). When the products amplified by N22-PCR from 28 human isolates of TTV were sequenced, only two genotypes of the virus were detected. The non-human sera tested came from primates kept in a zoo in north-western Venezuela. TTV DNA was detected, by HUTR-PCR, in both of the chimpanzee sera tested but not in any of the sera from the 11 New-World primates or the other 12 Old-World primates that were investigated. The results, particularly those of the HUTR-PCR, indicate that TTV infection is common in Venezuela, especially in populations, such as many Amerindian groups, who live under poor sanitary conditions. Although TTV infection may be relatively rare among non-human primates from the New World, this will have to be investigated further, using many more samples collected throughout the Americas.
- Published
- 2005
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