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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, January 2000, p. 94-98, Vol. 38, No. 1
0095-1137/0/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Development of a TT Virus DNA Quantification System
Using Real-Time Detection PCR
Takanobu
Kato,1
Masashi
Mizokami,1,*
Motokazu
Mukaide,2
Etsuro
Orito,1
Tomoyoshi
Ohno,1
Tatsunori
Nakano,1
Yasuhito
Tanaka,1
Hideaki
Kato,1
Fuminaka
Sugauchi,1
Ryuzo
Ueda,1
Noboru
Hirashima,3
Kazuhide
Shimamatsu,4
Masayoshi
Kage,4 and
Masamichi
Kojiro4
Second Department of Medicine, Nagoya City
University Medical School,1 and
Department of Gastroenterology, Chyukyo
Hospital,3 Nagoya, Center for Molecular
Biology and Cytogenetics, SRL, Inc., Tokyo,2
and Department of Pathology, Kurume University School of
Medicine, Kurume,4 Japan
Received 13 July 1999/Returned for modification 31 August
1999/Accepted 8 October 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
Although TT virus (TTV) was isolated from a cryptogenic
posttransfusion hepatitis patient, its pathogenic role remains unclear. It has been reported that the majority of the healthy population is
infected with TTV. To elucidate the differences between TTV infection
in patients with liver diseases and TTV infection in the healthy
population, a quantification system was developed. TTV DNA was
quantified by a real-time detection PCR (RTD-PCR) assay on an ABI Prism
7700 sequence detector. With this system, TTV DNA was quantified in 78 hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patients (63 with elevated serum
alanine aminotransferase [ALT] levels and 15 with normal ALT levels)
and in 70 voluntary blood donors (BDs). The quantification range was
2.08 to 7.35 log copies/ml. The intra-assay and interassay coefficients
of variation were 0.37 to 6.33% and 0.60 to 7.07%, respectively. The
mean serum TTV DNA levels in the HCV-infected patients with both
elevated and normal ALT levels and BDs were 3.69 ± 0.89, 3.45 ± 0.76, and 3.45 ± 0.67 log copies/ml, respectively.
Comparison of the serum TTV DNA levels among the HCV-infected patients
revealed that they were not related to the serum ALT and HCV core
protein levels or to the histopathological score on liver biopsy. This
study showed that (i) the RTD-PCR assay for the detection of TTV was accurate and had a high degree of sensitivity, (ii) the mean serum TTV
DNA level was similar among HCV-infected patients, irrespective of
their ALT level, and also among BDs, and (iii) a high serum TTV DNA
level does not affect the serum ALT and HCV levels or liver damage in
HCV-infected patients.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
A novel DNA virus, the TT virus
(TTV), named after the initials of the patient from whom it was first
isolated, was cloned from the acute-phase serum of a patient with
cryptogenic posttransfusion hepatitis (10). Although this
virus had been believed to have a linear single-stranded DNA genome
similar to that of members of the family Parvoviridae, the
latest report on the full genomic structure of this virus has indicated
that it has a circular genome similar to that of members of the family
Circoviridae (8, 9, 13). Since the virus was
found more often in patients with various liver diseases than in
voluntary blood donors, some pathogenic role is conceivable (1,
15). Recently, tests with a new highly sensitive primer set with
about 10- to 100-fold greater sensitivities than the conventional
primer sets used for TTV detection has revealed that the majority of
the general population in Japan is infected with TTV (16).
In our previous study with this primer set, we had determined that the
prevalence was not significantly different between hepatitis C virus
(HCV)-infected patients with chronic hepatitis and hepatocellular
carcinoma or between patients with hepatocellular carcinoma associated
with HCV infection and those with neither HCV nor hepatitis B virus
(HBV) in the serum. Moreover, comparison of patients with and without
TTV infection revealed no significant differences in their backgrounds,
biochemical findings, or histopathological scores (4).
Therefore, to evaluate the differences in serum TTV DNA levels between
healthy individuals and patients with liver diseases, an accurate and
highly sensitive system for the quantification of TTV has been developed.
Recently, the real-time detection PCR (RTD-PCR) assay has been
described as a new system for the quantification and detection of PCR
product accumulation. This system exploits the 5'-3' exonuclease activity of Taq DNA polymerase which hydrolyzes an internal
dually labeled (a fluorescent reporter dye and quencher dye) probe
(6). In the intact probe, the quencher dye suppresses the
fluorescence emission of the reporter dye. During the annealing and
extension phase of PCR, the probe anneals to the target sequence and is subsequently hydrolyzed and cleaved by Taq DNA polymerase.
The cleavage reduces the quenching effect and allows an increase in the
emission of the reporter dye fluorescence, and continuous measurement
of the increments in the fluorescence released during PCR provides an
accurate estimate of the initial copy number in the sample. This report
describes the use of this system for the quantification of the serum
TTV DNA levels in patients with HCV infection and voluntary blood
donors infected with TTV and determination of the correlation between
the amount of TTV and the severity of hepatic damage.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Materials.
Serum samples from 78 patients infected with HCV
but without hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) (63 had elevated serum
alanine aminotransferase [ALT] levels and 15 had normal ALT levels)
were analyzed. The subjects included previously reported patients who were known to be infected with TTV (4). As controls, 70 blood samples from voluntary blood donors supplied by the Japan Red Cross Blood Center, which were positive for TTV but negative for human
immunodeficiency virus, HBV, and HCV and which had been confirmed to
have normal ALT levels, were also obtained from the Department of Blood
Transfusion, Nagoya City University, as the attached tube for a
cross-matching test. All samples were stored at
80°C until use.
Anti-HCV was detected with a second-generation enzyme immunoassay kit
(Ortho Diagnostics, Tokyo, Japan). The samples were tested for HBsAg
and anti-HBsAg by the particle agglutination method (Fujirebio, Tokyo,
Japan), and the samples were tested for the anti-hepatitis B core
antigen by the passive hemagglutination method (International Regent
Co., Kobe, Japan). Serum HCV core protein levels were measured by
fluorescent enzyme immunoassay (14, 18).
To determine the reproducibility of the tests with the two sets of
primers and the probe and the correlation between the results
of tests
with the two sets of primers and the probe, serum samples
from selected
HCV patients with elevated ALT levels were
used.
Detection of TTV.
A total of 20 µl of DNA was extracted
from 100-µl serum samples by using the SMITEST EX-R&D (Sumitomo Metal
Industries, Tokyo, Japan). TTV DNA was detected by PCR with the primers
and under the conditions described by Takahashi et al. (16).
The expected sizes of the products were confirmed by electrophoresis on
3% agarose gels with ethidium bromide staining.
Construction of primers and probe.
For the RTD-PCR assay,
two sets of primers and probe located in 5' untranslated open reading
frame 2 were prepared. Set A primers were those reported by Takahashi
et al. (16), with slight modification, and consisted of
forward primer M801 (5'-CTACGTCACTAACCACGTG-3'), reverse
primer M935 (5'-TTCGGTGTGTAAACTCACC-3'), and probe TP117 (5'-AAACTCAGCCATTCGGAAGT-3'). The sequences of set B primers
were designed so that they were near the sequences of set A primers with reference to the alignment of the TTV sequence on the basis of
data from our studies and from the database of the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank (data not shown) and consisted of forward primer K117
(5'-CACTTCCGAATGGCTGAGTT-3'), reverse primer K233
(5'-GCCTTGCCCATAGCCCGG-3'), and probe TP208 (5'-TCCCGAGCCCGAATTGCCCCT-3'). The probe contains a
fluorescent reporter dye (6-carboxyfluorescein) at the 5' end and a
fluorescent quencher dye (6-carboxy-tetramethyl-rhodamine) at the 3' end.
RTD-PCR.
Ten microliters of the extracted DNA was detected
with the sequence detector system (ABI Prism 7700; Applied Biosystems,
Foster City, Calif.) in 50 µl of a PCR mixture containing TaqMan PCR Core Reagents with AmpliTaq Gold and AmpErase
uracil-N-glycosylase (Applied Biosystems), 20 pmol of each
primer, and 15 pmol of the probe. After initial activation of
uracil-N-glycosylase at 50°C for 2 min, AmpliTaq Gold was
activated at 95°C for 9 min. The subsequent PCR conditions consisted
of 50 cycles of denaturation at 95°C for 20 s and annealing and
extension at 60°C for 1 min per cycle. During the PCR amplification,
the amplified products were measured continuously by determination of
the fluorescence emission. After real-time data acquisition, the cycle
threshold value was calculated by determining the point at which the
fluorescence exceeds an arbitrary threshold limit. The threshold limit
was manually set to cross the fluorescent signal of all standards in
the exponential phase. The cycle threshold value is predictive of the
quantity of target copies in the samples.
For the standard curve, a standard DNA was constructed. The PCR
products obtained with primers M801 and K233 were cloned into
the TA
cloning vector (Invitrogen, San Diego, Calif.) and were
sequenced with
M13 primers to confirm the sequences of the primers
and the probe
region. This construct was used as the primary standard
after
quantification by optical density determination and was
prepared by use
of a series of 10-fold dilutions. For dilution
of the standards, TE
(Tris-EDTA) buffer was used, and the standards
were stored at

20°C.
Histopathological analysis.
Histopathological examinations
were performed for the HCV-infected patients with elevated ALT levels.
All liver tissue specimens were obtained by needle biopsy. Specimens
were fixed in 10% neutral formalin, embedded in paraffin, cut into
4-µm-thick sections, and stained with hematoxylin-eosin. Each
specimen was assessed independently by three liver pathologists (M. Kage, M. Kojiro, and K. Shimamatsu) by use of a scoring system which
included a grading of necroinflammation and staging of fibrosis on the
basis of the recommendations of Ichida et al. (3). In the
grading, inflammation in both the portal area and the lobular area was divided into four levels on the basis of the degrees of infiltration of
lymphocytes and necrosis of the hepatocytes. If the interpretations of
the pathologists differed, the score was determined to be that which
two pathologists agreed on.
Statistical analysis.
For statistical analysis of
categorical data, Mann-Whitney's U test, the Kruskal-Wallis test, and
analysis of variance (ANOVA) were used. For the liner regression,
Spearman's correlation test was used. Data analysis was carried out
with the StatView J, version 4.5, software package (Abacus Concepts
Inc., Berkeley, Calif.).
 |
RESULTS |
Sensitivity and reproducibility of RTD-PCR assay.
By using
standard DNA at a series of 10-fold dilutions, the detection range was
determined to be from 2.08 to 7.35 log copies/ml. To evaluate the
reproducibility of the RTD-PCR assay, a total of eight samples,
including six TTV-positive samples and two TTV-negative samples, were
tested five times on the same day or for 5 days. The intra-assay and
interassay coefficients of variation (CVs) were calculated to be within
the ranges of 0.37 to 6.33% and 0.60 to 7.07%, respectively (Table
1). Identical sensitivities and reproducibilities were obtained with each of the primer and probe sets.
Correlation between two sets of primers and probes.
The serum
TTV DNA levels of 50 HCV-infected patients were measured by using
primer and probe sets A and B, and these levels were almost identical
and showed a strong correlation (r = 0.871; P < 0.0001) (Fig. 1).
Serum TTV DNA levels among HCV-infected patients and blood
donors.
Among the samples from HCV-infected patients with elevated
ALT levels and those with normal ALT levels and voluntary blood donors,
the serum TTV DNA levels could be quantified for 54 of 63 (85.7%), 13 of 15 (86.7%), and 62 of 70 (88.6%) samples, respectively. For the
remaining samples for which virus was not quantified, the serum TTV DNA
level was considered to be below the detection range of this assay.
The mean serum TTV DNA levels in the HCV-infected patients with
elevated ALT levels and normal ALT levels and blood donors
were
3.69 ± 0.89, 3.45 ± 0.76, and 3.45 ± 0.67 log
copies/ml,
respectively, and these data were similar and were not
significantly
different (Table
2).
Comparison of HCV-infected patients with
high (>3.50 log copies/ml)
and low (<3.50 log copies/ml) serum
TTV DNA levels indicated no
significant differences in terms of
mean age, sex, serum ALT level, and
serum HCV core protein level
(Table
3).
Histopathological examination was performed for HCV-infected
patients
with elevated ALT levels, and the results were expressed
as the
fibrosis score, classified into five stages (stages F0
to F4), and the
activity score, classified into four grades (grades
A0 to A3),
according to the New Inuyama Classification. The mean
score for each
parameter was also represented as an index. Among
patients with high
serum TTV DNA levels, 10 were classified into
stage F0, 18 were
classified into stage F1, 3 were classified
into stage F2, 1 was
classified into stage F3, and 1 was classified
into stage F4; the mean
score was 0.939 ± 0.899. One was classified
into grade A0, 18 were classified into grade A1, 11 were classified
into grade A2, and 3 were classified into grade A3; the mean score
was 1.485 ± 0.712. Among the patients with low serum TTV DNA levels,
5 were classified
into stage F0, 12 were classified into stage
F1, 2 were classified into
stage F2, 1 was classified into stage
F3, and 1 was classified into
stage F4; the mean score was 1.095
± 0.995. One was classified
into grade A0, 15 were classified
into grade A1, 4 were classified into
grade A2, and 1 was classified
into grade A3; mean score was 1.238 ± 0.625. No significant difference
in the ratios or the mean scores
were observed (Table
3).
 |
DISCUSSION |
At first, TTV was believed to be a novel hepatitis virus because
it could be isolated from three of five patients with cryptogenic posttransfusion hepatitis. However, our previous study revealed that
TTV is prevalent among both patients with liver diseases and voluntary
blood donors (4). Thus, to clarify the correlation between
serum TTV DNA levels and liver diseases, we developed a quantification
assay with high degrees of sensitivity, accuracy, specificity, and
reproducibility. Some of the findings from this quantification assay
are that (i) the mean serum TTV DNA level was similar among
HCV-infected patients irrespective of the serum ALT level and also
among voluntary blood donors, and (ii) the serum TTV DNA level is not
related to the serum ALT and HCV core protein levels or the
histopathological score of fibrosis and inflammation among HCV patients.
The RTD-PCR system enables the accurate and highly sensitive estimation
of the level of TTV infection. This system is now available for
quantification of HCV and Escherichia coli and even for the
detection of cancer cells (2, 5, 7, 12, 17). It has a wide
dynamic range (2.08 to 7.35 log copies/ml), and the intra-assay and
interassay CVs ranged from 0.37 to 6.33% and 0.60 to 7.07%,
respectively. In regard to specificity, the fluorescence signal due to
cleavage of the probe is generated only if the target sequence for the
probe is amplified by PCR, and no signal is observed under the
condition of nonspecific amplification. To confirm the accuracy and to
negate the influence of primers and probe affinity, two sets of primers
and probe were used to obtain estimates of TTV DNA levels in our study,
and the quantification data obtained with these two sets were identical
and showed a strong correlation. Besides these advantages, it must also
be mentioned that other useful systems for the quantification of TTV
are not available. Therefore, this quantification system will be useful
for estimation of the severity of TTV infection.
The results of recent studies raise a question regarding the
association between TTV infection and hepatic disorders. Mushahwar et
al. (9) reported that inoculation of TTV into chimpanzees could not induce hepatitis. In regard to this point, our investigation of the quantification of TTV among HCV-infected patients might be
relevant. Serum TTV DNA levels were similar, irrespective of the
severity of liver injury, and were even similar in HCV-infected patients and blood donors. Comparison of HCV-infected patients with
both high and low serum TTV DNA levels revealed no significant differences in serum ALT and HCV core protein levels or the
histopathological score. These data imply that TTV infection and
replication occur in many healthy people and do not affect the HCV
infection or the liver damage due to HCV infection. This observation
does not totally negate the association between TTV infection and
hepatitis. In the case of the other hepatitis viruses, such as HCV, a
dissociation between the serum viral titer and the severity of
hepatitis is observed. To estimate the pathogenicity of TTV, the serial
monitoring of serum TTV DNA levels in patients with hepatitis of
unknown etiology will be needed.
Another important use of this system is to identify the organs for
which TTV has an affinity. The findings of the similarity of TTV to
members of the family Circoviridae rather than to members of
the family Parvoviridae could suggest the possibility of an association of TTV with diseases other than liver diseases. For example, the chicken anemia virus, a representative of the family Circoviridae, induces severe anemia, subcutaneous and
intramuscular hemorrhage, destruction of erythroblastoid cells in the
bone marrow, and depletion of certain lymphoid organs in young chickens
(11). By using the quantification system described here,
further studies on the quantification of TTV in various organs such as
the bone marrow and estimation of the pathogenicity of this virus will be needed.
In summary, an accurate and highly sensitive system for the
quantification of TTV has been developed. By using this system, it was
revealed that the titer of TTV DNA in serum does not affect HCV
infection or the liver damage due to HCV.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We express our gratitude to Osamu Yanagihara for quantification
of the HCV core protein level.
This work was supported in part by a grant from the Japanese Ministry
of Health and Welfare, Health Science Research Grants (Non-A, Non-B
Hepatitis Research Grants), and by a Grant-in Aid for Scientific
Research (B) from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and
Culture (grant 11691222).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Second
Department of Medicine, Nagoya City University Medical School,
Kawasumi, Mizuho, Nagoya 467-8601, Japan. Phone: 81-52-853-8216. Fax: 81-52-852-0849. E-mail:
mizokami{at}med.nagoya-cu.ac.jp.
 |
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, January 2000, p. 94-98, Vol. 38, No. 1
0095-1137/0/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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