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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 1998, p. 470-474, Vol. 36, No. 2
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.

Hepatitis G Virus Infection in Amerindians and Other Venezuelan High-Risk Groups

Flor H. Pujol,1,* Yury E. Khudyakov,2 Marisol Devesa,1 Mian-E. Cong,2 Carmen L. Loureiro,1 Linda Blitz,3 Freya Capriles,4 Simón Beker,5,dagger Ferdinando Liprandi,1 and Howard A. Fields2

Laboratorio de Biología de Virus, Centro de Microbiología y Biología Celular, IVIC,1 Unidad de Hemodiálisis Crónica de Caracas,4 and Centro Médico de Caracas,5 Caracas 1020-A, and Laboratorio Regional de Referencia Virológica, LUZ, Maracaibo,3 Venezuela, and Hepatitis Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia2

Received 7 May 1997/Returned for modification 10 September 1997/Accepted 19 November 1997

Recently, a new virus related to flaviviruses, the hepatitis G virus (HGV), or GBV-C virus, was discovered as a putative blood-borne human pathogen. HGV RNA (NS5 region) was amplified by reverse transcription-nested PCR in the sera of 6 of 64 (9%) hemodialysis patients; 2 of 80 (2.5%) West Yukpa Amerindians, a population with a high rate of HBV infection but negative for HCV infection; and 1 patient with an acute episode of non-A, non-B, non-C hepatitis (NABCH). The patterns of single-strand conformation polymorphism of the amplified products were unique among different specimens and similar on follow-up for hemodialysis patients. All patients tested remained HGV RNA positive 1 and 2 years later, without major sequence variation, except for the NABCH patient, for whom a double infection and an apparent clearance of the original dominant variant was observed after 2 years. The sequences of the NS5 amplified products demonstrated 85 to 90% identity with other reported HGV sequences.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratorio de Biología de Virus, CMBC, IVIC, Apdo 21827, Caracas 1020-A, Venezuela. Phone and fax: 58.2.504.1623. E-mail: fpujol{at}pasteur.ivic.ve.

dagger Deceased.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 1998, p. 470-474, Vol. 36, No. 2
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.



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