To demonstrate vertical transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) from an HCV-infected, non-human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected mother to her infant and to assess the distribution of viral species in the mother and infant, the hypervariable region of the gene encoding the putative envelope glycoprotein E2 (E2HV) was sequenced in three mothers and one mother-infant pair. The data indicate that (i) quasi-species distributions of HCV E2HV variants were found in all four mothers, (ii) a single predominant HCV E2HV variant was found in the infant of a mother shown to have nine predominant E2HV variants, and (iii) the infant's E2HV variant was highly related to, but not identical with, the nine variants identified in the mother at the time of birth. These findings indicate that HCV is transmitted from mother to infant and raise the possibility that the transmission occurs in utero.
CITATION STYLE
Weiner, A. J., Thaler, M. M., Crawford, K., Ching, K., Kansopon, J., Chien, D. Y., … Houghton, M. (1993). A unique, predominant hepatitis C virus variant found in an infant born to a mother with multiple variants. Journal of Virology, 67(7), 4365–4368. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.67.7.4365-4368.1993
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.