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The natural history of non-human GB virus C in captive chimpanzees.

Authors :
Mohr EL
Murthy KK
McLinden JH
Xiang J
Stapleton JT
Source :
The Journal of general virology [J Gen Virol] 2011 Jan; Vol. 92 (Pt 1), pp. 91-100. Date of Electronic Publication: 2010 Sep 22.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

GB virus C (GBV-C) is a common, non-pathogenic human virus that infects lymphocytes. Persistent GBV-C infection of humans with coexistent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is associated with prolonged survival, and GBV-C replication inhibits HIV replication in vitro. A GBV-C virus variant was identified in chimpanzees in 1998 and was named GBV-C(trog) or GBV-C(cpz). The prevalence and natural history of GBV-C in chimpanzees remains uncharacterized. We examined the sera from 235 captive chimpanzees for the presence of GBV-C viraemia, viral persistence and clearance, E2 antibody kinetics and RNA sequence diversity. Sequences from six isolates shared more sequence identity with GBV-C(cpz) than with human GBV-C. The prevalence of GBV-C(cpz) viraemia and E2 antibody in chimpanzees (2.5 and 11 %, respectively) was similar to human GBV-C prevalence in healthy human blood donors (1.8 and 9 %, respectively). Persistent GBV-C(cpz) infection occurred in two of the six viraemic animals and was documented for 19 years in one animal. Host subspecies troglodyte GBV-C isolates and published verus GBV-C isolates shared a high degree of sequence identity, suggesting that GBV-C in chimpanzees should be identified with a chimpanzee designation (GBV-C(cpz)). The prevalence and natural history of chimpanzee GBV-C variant (GBV-C(cpz)) appears to be similar to human GBV-C infection. The chimpanzee could serve as an animal model to study HIV-GBV-C co-infection.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1465-2099
Volume :
92
Issue :
Pt 1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of general virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
20861317
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.026088-0