Exposure of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA-positive recipients to HCV RNA-positive blood donors results in rapid predominance of a single donor strain and exclusion and/or suppression of the recipient strain.

Pubmed ID: 11160710

Pubmed Central ID: PMC114790

Journal: Journal of virology

Publication Date: March 1, 2001

Affiliation: Division of Transplantation Medicine, Mayo Clinic Scottsdale, Scottsdale, Arizona 85259, USA. laskus.tomasz@mayo.edu

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Adult, Female, RNA, Viral, Base Sequence, Middle Aged, Blood Donors, Hepacivirus, Viral Envelope Proteins, Hepatitis C, Molecular Sequence Data, Polymorphism, Single-Stranded Conformational, Superinfection, Viral Nonstructural Proteins, Transfusion Reaction

Grants: N01-HB-42972

Authors: Laskus T, Wilkinson J, Radkowski M, Nowicki M, Vargas H, Rakela J, Wang LF

Cite As: Laskus T, Wang LF, Radkowski M, Vargas H, Nowicki M, Wilkinson J, Rakela J. Exposure of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA-positive recipients to HCV RNA-positive blood donors results in rapid predominance of a single donor strain and exclusion and/or suppression of the recipient strain. J Virol 2001 Mar;75(5):2059-66.

Studies:

Abstract

We have analyzed three cases of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected recipients who received blood from HCV-infected donors. Two recipients were exposed to two different HCV RNA-positive donors, and one was exposed to a single donor. All parental genomes from the actual infecting units of blood and the recipients were defined, and their presence in the follow-up serum samples was determined using sensitive strain-specific assays. The strain from one of the donors was found to predominate in all recipients' serum samples collected throughout the follow-up period of 10 to 30 months. In two recipients exposed to two infected donors, the strain from the second donor was occasionally found at very low level. However, the original recipients' strains were not detected. Our observations show that HCV-infected individuals can be superinfected with different strains, and this event may lead to eradication or suppression of the original infecting strain. Furthermore, our findings demonstrate that simultaneous exposure to multiple HCV strains may result in concomitant infection by more than one strain, although a single strain could rapidly establish its dominance. The results of the present study suggest the existence of competition among infecting HCV strains which determines the ultimate outcome of multiple HCV exposure.