Persistence of human herpesvirus 7 in normal tissues detected by expression of a structural antigen

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Abstract

Human herpesvirus 7 (HHV-7) infection in histologically normal human tissues was investigated by immunohistochemical detection of the 85-kDa tegument phosphoprotein (pp85) encoded by the U14 gene. So far, two cell types were recognized as sites of HHV-7 infection in vivo: CD4+ T lymphocytes, believed to be the site of latent infection, and epithelial cells of salivary glands, the site of productive infection and vital shedding. Unexpectedly, cells expressing the HHV-7 structural antigen were detectable in lungs, skin, and mammary glands. Morphologically and phenotypically, they were distinct from lymphocytes. Liver, kidney, and tonsils were positive, although the number of HHV-7-positive cells was low. Large intestine, spleen, and brain were negative. Different from the current notion of the state of HHV-7 in humans, the results show that a variety of tissues harbor cells at a late stage of infection and suggest that HHV-7 causes a persistent rather than a true latent infection.

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Kempf, W., Adams, V., Mirandola, P., Menotti, L., Di Luca, D., Wey, N., … Campadelli-Fiume, G. (1998). Persistence of human herpesvirus 7 in normal tissues detected by expression of a structural antigen. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 178(3), 841–845. https://doi.org/10.1086/515339

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