HCV replicates in liver via an intermediate negative strand RNA. To study the relevance of HCV genome replication, quantitative strandspecific HCV real-time RT-PCR assays were developed and applied to livers explanted because of end-stage cirrhosis. The assays have broad ranges of determination and a high reproducibility and accuracy. Analysis of five different samples showed an even distribution of HCV genomes in four livers. Hepatic concentrations of positive (PS)- and negative (NS)-strand RNA did correlate with each other, with PS/NS ratios ranging between 3 and 340. Hepatic concentrations of HCV-PS or -NS RNA did not correlate with serum HCV-RNA levels or with genotypes.Ahigh HCV envelope-2 protein expression correlated with a low NS concentration. HCV-PS and -NS levels, E2 protein expression and genotype did not correlate with biochemical tests or with histological changes in the explanted liver, but the ratio NS/PS, a marker of viral replication, correlated with the severity of the recurrent post-transplant hepatitis caused by HCV. This suggests the existence of an extra-hepatic location of HCV with comparable viral replication rate being responsible for the infection of the newly transplanted liver. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Lin, L., Libbrecht, L., Verbeeck, J., Verslype, C., Roskams, T., Van Pelt, J., … Fevery, J. (2009). Quantitation of replication of the HCV genome in human livers with end-stage cirrhosis by strand-specific real-time RT-PCR assays: Methods and clinical relevance. Journal of Medical Virology, 81(9), 1569–1575. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmv.21510
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