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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2006, p. 2571-2574, Vol. 44, No. 7
0095-1137/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.00233-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Virology Section and Retrovirus Center, Department of Experimental Pathology, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
Received 2 February 2006/ Returned for modification 13 March 2006/ Accepted 25 April 2006
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One major feature of anelloviruses is their ability to produce chronic viremia. In fact, >80% of people harbor variably high viral loads (VL) of TTV in plasma, regardless of geographic origin, age, and health conditions, and quite often such VL consist of several genetic forms of the virus (1). The present study is the first, to our knowledge, to show that a sudden transient increase of plasma VL can be sustained by an apparently short-lived superinfection by a TTV different from the ones already present in the host.
Starting observation. During studies of the consequences of routine immunizations on TTV viremia using a universal quantitative real-time PCR (9), one study subject (MON) manifested a 3.75-log increase in plasma VL, along with the development of mild flu-like symptoms at 30 days after hepatitis B vaccination. The increase was followed by a rapid decline that brought VL first to a brief dip and then back to prevaccination levels (ca. 5.5 x 106 DNA copies per ml). Subsequently, despite immunization with a second vaccine, the VL remained stable over the remaining observation period (Fig. 1). Because the transient increase of TTV replication observed in MON was much greater than that seen in the rest of the vaccinated study group (0.4 ± 0.1 log10, mean ± the standard deviation), we considered it worthy of further investigation.
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FIG. 1. Dynamics of TTV in the plasma and PBMC of the study subject. The arrowheads under the time scale indicate administration of HBV (day 0) and influenza vaccines (day 240). In parentheses, the percent TTV immunocomplexed is shown. At the top, the results of the group-specific PCRs, performed on selected samplings, are shown. The group 2-specific PCR reported was the one with expanded breadth modified to amplify ViPi04, as well as the other genotypes in the group. The results with the group 5-specific PCR are not shown because no sample reacted positively throughout the observation period. The inset shows semiquantitative data obtained by examining plasma collected at the times indicated with group-specific PCRs.
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Identification of a novel group 2 TTV genotype. Collectively, the findings presented above suggested that the cause of the plasma VL burst observed in MON was superinfection by a TTV amplified by universal PCR but not by group-specific PCRs. To verify this possibility, we sequenced the TTV dominant in plasma at peak VL (day 30) using various sets of primers designed to this purpose (Table 1). This led us to identify a novel TTV genotype, designated ViPi04, which segregated within group 2 but diverged 35 to 39% from the other viruses in this group, thus representing the first member of a distinct group 2 genotype (Fig. 2). We used the ViPi04 sequence to design new primers for the group 2-specific PCR (Table 1), so that it detected ViPi04 as effectively as the others in the group and yet had a specificity and sensitivity similar to the original assay (4,000 DNA copies per ml of plasma), and then retested MON plasma samples with this improved assay. The only positive plasma sample was the one at peak VL, indicating that ViPi04 had persisted briefly in plasma (Fig. 1). However, semiquantitative analyses showed that, at this time, ViPi04 was by far the dominant genotype, exceeding genotypes 6 and 21 by at least 1 and 2 logs (Fig. 1, inset), respectively, and that it mostly circulated as free virus, being much less immunocomplexed than the other TTVs (data not shown).
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TABLE 1. PCR primers used in this study
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FIG. 2. Phylogenetic analysis of TTV ViPi04 based on full-length or near-full-length sequences. The branching pattern of the trees was obtained by the FastME algorithm included in DAMBE program (version 4.2.13). Bootstrap resampling was used to test the robustness of the tree, and bootstrap values of >900 out of 1,000 replicates are shown at the branch points. The tree was drawn by using Treeview (version 1.6.6). ViPi04 (indicated in boldface; accession number DQ361268) is 3,774 nucleotides in size and has a genetic organization (i.e., UTR length, presence of conserved motifs, number and presumed transcriptional profile of open reading frames) similar to what reported for other group 2 TTV isolates (5). The numbers in boldface around the tree indicate TTV genogroups according to Biagini et al. (2). The scale bar represents a 10% genetic difference.
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Prevalence of group 2 TTV in the population with the upgraded PCR. The redesigned group 2-specific PCR was used to examine stored plasma from 48 adults, among healthy individuals and patients with various diseases, and 11 pairs of nasal swabs and plasma from children with acute respiratory disease, all known to be TTV positive. The only one proving to be group 2 positive was one nasal swab, and this, on sequencing, yielded a TTV clearly distinct from ViPi04 and 98% identical to the previously described PM virus isolate (5).
Conclusions. This report describes an apparently self-limited infection by a superimposed TTV genotype in an individual who already carried three different genetic forms of the virus. The superinfection showed up as a rapid increase in plasma VL, and the superinfecting virus was recognized as a novel group 2 TTV genotype, designated ViPi04. Studies (3-5, 10) have shown that group 2 TTV is much less common than other TTV groups (e.g., 35-fold relative to group 3 in reference 10). Testing clinical specimens with group 2-specific PCR primers redesigned to detect the new, as well as the other, genotypes in the group showed that ViPi04 is as uncommon as other group 2 TTV genotypes. The reasons for the widely uneven prevalence rates for the five TTV groups are unknown, but a clear possibility is that, at least in part, they reflect differences in the ability to persist. Thus, it may not be a coincidence that ViPi04 was detected in the study subject plasma only very briefly. PBMC, the only other specimen of the subject available, tested ViPi04 positive for only 15 additional days, possibly indicating complete eradication of the superinfecting genotype. The circumstance that the subject was already carrying three different genotypes andas revealed by the substantial aliquot of the preexisting VL that was immunocomplexedpossessed antibodies to these viruses may have helped clearing the superimposed virus. That preformed antibodies may be more effective at controlling fresh than established infection is well known (6). The serological relationships between TTV groups are still completely unexplored.
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