Quantification of hepatitis C virus-infected peripheral blood mononuclear cells by in situ reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction

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Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is known to infect peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of patients with chronic hepatitis C, but the proportion of HCV- infected circulating cells is not detectable by conventional reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and the pathogenic significance of HCV lymphotropism is still unclear. Therefore, we have devised an in situ RT-PCR technique using fluorescein-labeled HCV-specific primers revealed by flow cytometry. PBMC were isolated from 28 patients with chronic HCV-related liver disease; of these, 6 had previously received an orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) and were on immunosuppressive treatment. Fourteen patients (50%) were found positive for HCV genome within PBMC by in situ RT-PCR, the proportion of HCV-infected cells ranging from 0.2% to 8.1%. All 6 OLT patients tested positive. The fluorescent signal, corresponding to the HCV-specific 340-bp amplicon, was confined to part of the cytoplasmic compartment of scattered PBMC. Of these 14 patients, 12 had also negative-strand HCV RNA within PBMC detected by 'tagged' RT-PCR. We conclude that HCV may infect a significant proportion of PBMC in chronic hepatitis C patients, especially immunosuppressed OLT cases, and that viral replication within PBMC is a common occurrence. Over time, the persistence of HCV-infected immune system cells might interfere with normal immunologic mechanisms and play a role in the pathogenic processes leading to extrahepatic disorders such as mixed cryoglobulinemia and B-cell malignant lymphoma.

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Muratori, L., Gibellini, D., Lenzi, M., Cataleta, M., Muratori, P., Morelli, M. C., & Bianchi, F. B. (1996). Quantification of hepatitis C virus-infected peripheral blood mononuclear cells by in situ reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Blood, 88(7), 2768–2774. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v88.7.2768.bloodjournal8872768

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