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Journal of Virology, January 2002, p. 600-608, Vol. 76, No. 2
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.2.600-608.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Transplantation Medicine, Mayo Clinic Scottsdale, Scottsdale, Arizona 85259,1 Institute of Infectious Diseases, Medical Academy, Warsaw, Poland,2 Maternal-Child Virology Research Laboratory, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 900333
Received 8 August 2001/ Accepted 4 October 2001
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Whether HCV can infect the central nervous system (CNS) remains unclear. HCV belongs to the Flaviviridae family, which includes several well-known neurotropic viruses (e.g., yellow fever, dengue, and tick-borne encephalitis viruses), and several reports have implicated HCV as an occasional cause of various CNS and peripheral nervous system pathologies (3, 6, 11, 13, 27). Moreover, HCV RNA has been detected in cerebrospinal fluid from both HIV-positive and HIV-negative patients (23, 25), and viral sequences have been amplified directly from brain tissue from a patient diagnosed with progressive encephalomyelitis (3). However, the presence of viral sequences in any particular compartment cannot be regarded as evidence for replication, and to prove the latter, the presence of replicative intermediates must be established. In the case of positive-strand viruses such as HCV, cells supporting replication should contain viral negative-strand RNA sequences.
In the present study we analyzed HCV RNA in autopsy brain tissue samples from six subjects, three of whom were HIV-1 positive. In addition to strand-specific detection of HCV RNA negative strands, we compared viral sequences amplified from various CNS structures and serum, assuming that in the presence of independent viral compartments they could be different, much like what has been described for HIV-1 (10). To our knowledge, this is the first attempt to detect HCV replicative intermediaries in brain tissue and to analyze viral sequences derived from various parts of the brain.
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TABLE 1. Clinical and virologic data on six HCV-infected patients whose autopsy CNS tissue samples were analyzed for the presence of HCV replicationa
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The strand-specific assay was capable of detecting approximately 100 genomic eq molecules of the correct strand while unspecifically detecting
108 genomic eq of the incorrect strand. The addition of 1 to 5 µg of total cellular RNA extracted from human tissues would lower the sensitivity of the reaction by no more than 1 log, while the specificity of the assay was not affected. Thus, the strand-specific assay was capable of detecting between 102 and 103 viral genomic eq in 1 µg of RNA. In serum the approximate detection limit was 103 eq/ml. The sensitivity and specificity of our assay for the detection of the positive strand were identical to those for the detection of the negative strand.
Standard RT-PCR. Moloney murine leukemia virus RT-based detection of HCV has been described in detail previously (17). This assay was capable of detecting approximately 10 genomic eq of the correct synthetic template but was not strand specific. Similarly to Tth-based assay, the addition of cellular RNA would slightly lower the sensitivity by up to 1 log. The established detection limit was approximately 10 to 100 genomic eq per 1 µg of total RNA. In serum the approximate detection limit was 100 genomic eq per 1 ml.
The NS5 region was amplified by RT-PCR using primers described previously (21). Appropriate measures, described elsewhere (17, 20), were employed to prevent and detect contamination. Nested protocols, which are prone to carryover contamination, were not used for detection purposes. All RT-PCR runs included positive controls consisting of end point dilutions of respective RNA strands, and negative controls included brain tissue samples from uninfected subjects and normal sera.
Analysis of HCV quasispecies. The analysis was conducted on the stable 5' untranslated region (5'UTR) because a small number of expected viral variants within quasispecies allows for reliable comparison and we have previously found that variations in this region may correlate with extrahepatic replication (16, 17). In addition, comparison of highly variable E2 regions may be unreliable due to selective adsorption by human cells of viral quasispecies differing in the E2 region (18). For the purpose of sequence comparison, nested protocols were used to maximize the yield of PCR product. Amplification of the 5'UTR was conducted by using the RT-PCR assay as previously described (17).
HCV quasispecies were compared by the single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) assay as described elsewhere (17), with minor modifications. In brief, PCR products were purified with a DNA binding resin system (Wizard PCR; Promega, Madison, Wis.) and resuspended in 50 µl of water. Next, 2 to 4 µl of the purified product was diluted in15 µl of low-ionic-strength solution (10% saccharose, 0.5% bromophenol blue, 0.5% xylene cyanol), denatured by heating at 97°C for 3 min, immediately cooled on ice, and subjected to nondenaturing 8% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in 1x Tris-borate-EDTA buffer with 400 V applied for 5 to 6 h at a constant temperature of 25°C. The bands were visualized with silver staining (Silver Stain; Promega). This assay enables detection of minor variants representing
3% of the whole population (17).
All analyzed products were sequenced directly in both directions using a Perkin-Elmer ABI 377 automatic sequencer. To rule out incorporation errors by Taq polymerase, direct sequencing was repeated from a new amplification reaction. HCV genotypes were determined by direct sequencing of the NS5 region (33).
The presence of CD2 (T cells), CD19 (B cells), and CD14 (monocyte/macrophage) phenotypes was determined by RT-PCR as described by others (34). The following primers were used: for CD2, 5'-AGACCGATGATCAGGATAT-3' and 5'-TGGGAAGTTGCTGGATTCTG-3' (expected product size, 547 bp); for CD14, 5'-ATGCATGTGGTCCAGCGCCC-3' and 5'-CCACCGACAGGGTCGAACG-3' (expected product size, 266 bp); for CD19, 5'-GACCTCACCATGGCCCCTGG-3' and 5'-CTGGCCGAGCAGTGATCTCC-3' (expected product size, 277 bp). To prevent contamination with genomic DNA, extracted RNA was digested with DNase I (1 U/µg of RNA), extracted with phenol-chloroform, and ethanol precipitated. In addition, to check the integrity of isolated RNA and to detect contaminating genomic DNA, ß-actin primers specific for two different exons separated by an intron were used (5'-TCATGTTTGAGACCTTCAA-3' and 5'-GTCTTTGCGGATGTCCACG-3'). Amplification of genomic DNA would result in a 607-bp product, while amplification of cDNA would result in a 513-bp product.
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TABLE 2. The detection and titers of positive and negative strands of HCV RNA in serum, lymph nodes, and different parts of brain in six subjectsa
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FIG. 1. Detection of negative-strand HCV RNA in various brain tissue samples and lymph nodes (LN) in patients 1 to 3 (Pt 1 to Pt 3). The presence of viral negative strands was determined using strand-specific Tth-based RT-PCR. Twenty microliters (20%) of the reaction mixture was fractionated on agarose, transferred to a nylon membrane by Southern blotting, and subsequently hybridized to a 32P-labeled probe. The amount of RNA loaded into each reaction mixture was 5 µg; in the case of serum (S), it corresponded to 100 µl. The examined brain tissue samples included cerebral cortex (CC), subcortical white matter (WM), nucleus lentiformis (NL), cerebellum (C), and medulla oblongata (MO). In patient 1 only medulla oblongata was available for study. Positive sensitivity controls (lanes P) consisted of 103 genomic eq of the correct synthetic strand mixed with 5 µg of RNA extracted from brain tissue from an HCV-negative subject. Negative controls (lanes N) consisted of 5 µg of RNA extracted from brain tissue from uninfected patients.
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FIG. 2. The detection of HCV negative-strand (-str) and positive-strand (+str) RNA in brain tissue samples from patients 1 to 3 (Pt 1 to Pt 3). The analyzed tissues were medulla oblongata, cerebellum, and subcortical white matter in patients 1, 2, and 3, respectively. In addition, lymph node (LN) from patient 2 was studied. Tenfold serial dilutions of extracted RNA were tested for the presence of positive- and negative-strand HCV RNA by Tth-based RT-PCR. The amount of RNA loaded into the reaction mixture at dilution 100 corresponds to 5 µg. Negative controls (lanes N) consisted of RNA extracted from brain tissue from uninfected subjects, and positive/sensitivity controls (lanes P) consisted of 103 genomic eq of the correct synthetic strand mixed with 5 µg of RNA from an uninfected subject.
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FIG. 3. (A) Analysis by SSCP of 5'UTR HCV sequences amplified from serum (S) and various autopsy brain tissue samples from patients 1 to 3 (Pt 1 to Pt 3). The following brain tissue samples were examined: cerebral cortex (CC), subcortical white matter (WM), nucleus lentiformis (NL), cerebellum (C), and medulla oblongata (MO). In patient 1 only medulla oblongata was available for study, while in patient 3 HCV RNA from medulla oblongata could not be amplified. In patients 1 and 2, mediastinal lymph nodes (LN) were also available for analysis. HCV RNA negative strands were detected in medulla oblongata in patient 1, in lymph node and cerebellum in patient 2, and in subcortical white matter in patient 3. The presence of identical and dissimilar viral sequences in the analyzed samples was verified by direct sequencing. Symbols: +, positive strand; -, negative strand. (B) Analysis by SSCP of 5'UTR HCV sequences amplified from serum (S) and various autopsy brain tissue samples from patients 4 to 6. Abbreviations denoting various analyzed tissues are the same as those for panel A. HCV RNA negative strands were not detected in any of the samples. The presence of identical viral sequences in the analyzed samples was verified by direct sequencing.
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FIG. 4. Nucleotide sequence alignment of 5'UTR fragments of HCV recovered from serum (S) and brain tissue samples from patients 1 to 3 (Pt1 to Pt3). Sequences are compared with the prototype sequence published by Choo et al. (7) shown on the top line. Symbols and abbreviations: -, sequence identity; +, positive strand; -, negative strand; MO, medulla oblongata; WM, subcortical white matter; LN, lymph node; C, cerebellum.
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To further clarify the issue of different HCV genotypes in the CNS and circulation in patients 1 and 2, we conducted SSCP analysis of NS5 region sequences amplified from serum, lymph nodes, and pertinent brain structures. Positive and negative strands were amplified using the Tth-based assay. As can be seen in Fig. 5, similar to the results of 5'UTR analysis, positive and negative strands amplified from medulla oblongata and cerebellum in patients 1 and 2, respectively, were different than those amplified from serum. In addition, in patient 2 the pattern for the positive strand from the lymph node was identical to the serum pattern, while the negative strands pattern resembled the pattern found in the brain (some additional bands present in neither the serum- nor brain-derived viral sequences were also present). Direct sequencing of the viral negative strand amplified from this lymph node allowed its classification as type 1a, while the positive strand was classified as type 1b.
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FIG. 5. Analysis by SSCP of NS5 region sequences amplified from serum (S), lymph node (LN), and brain tissue samples from patients 1 and 2. Symbols and abbreviations: MO, medulla oblongata; C, cerebellum; +, positive strand; -, negative strand.
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3%). A commonly used alternative, sequencing of cloned PCR products, would require a large number of clones to be processed and sequenced, making it laborious and thereby impractical. We decided to use sequence-specific primers that would allow specific amplification of one sequence from the background of other sequences. This strategy takes advantage of the observation that mismatches localized at the 3' terminus of the primer can dramatically decrease amplification efficiency (14, 26). However, as relatively few differences were present between the brain-derived and serum-derived strains in the 5'UTR, the analysis was conducted on the NS5 region. We previously used this approach to analyze virological outcome in cases of infection with multiple HCV strains (21).
In both cases, strain-specific primers were designed to match either the serum- or brain-derived sequence but to provide a 3' end mismatch with respect to the other strain (Fig. 6). Thus, these primers should preferentially amplify only one of the strains present. To provide the control template necessary to check the specificity of the reactions, the first-round PCR product representing either the serum- or brain-derived viral sequence was end point diluted so that no more than one in five reactions was positive when amplified with the second round of primers. In this case, the second-round PCR product would be for the most part derived from single template copies, thus ensuring that it is homogenous (32). The sequence of these control templates was ascertained by direct sequencing.
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FIG. 6. Nucleotide sequence alignment of the NS5 region fragments of HCV recovered from patients 1 and 2 (Pt 1 and Pt 2) from serum (S) and autopsy brain tissue. In patient 1 viral fragments recovered from medulla oblongata (MO) and in patient 2 sequences recovered from cerebellum (C) were different from those found in respective serum. Sequence differences between the serum- and brain-derived strains were exploited to design strain-specific primers which would allow specific amplification of one strain from the background of the other strain. The underlined sequence segments show the location of the strain-specific primers. The nucleotide numbering system follows that of the type 1a wild-type strain described by Choo et al. (8).
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FIG. 7. Specific detection of serum-derived HCV sequences in brain tissue (A) and of brain-derived sequences in serum (B) in two patients with evidence of viral replication in the CNS. One microgram of RNA extracted from medulla oblongata (patient 1) (Pt1) and cerebellum (patient 2) (Pt2) or RNA corresponding to 100 µl of serum was subjected to 35 cycles of RT-PCR, after which the product was diluted 1:10 and 1 µl was amplified for another 35 cycles with strain-specific primers. Each reaction was repeated in 4 independent experiments (lanes 1 to 4). As can be seen, serum-derived sequences were detected from the background of brain-derived sequences in all four independent experiments, while the brain-derived sequences were detected from the background of serum-derived sequences less uniformly. The RT-PCR products were sequenced and it was determined that they matched the sequences they were designed to amplify. The positive controls (P) contain approximately 104 to 105 template copies (as determined by optical density readings) of the correct template, while negative controls (N) contain approximately 1010 template copies of the incorrect template. Samples were analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis (3% NuSieve). Lane m, 1-kb molecular ladder (Gibco/BRL).
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FIG. 8. The determination of the proportion of brain- and serum-derived sequences in serum and brain tissue from patient 1 and 2 (Pt 1 and Pt 2). In addition, in patient 2 lymph node was also studied. One microgram of RNA extracted from medulla oblongata (patient 1) and cerebellum (patient 2) or RNA corresponding to 100 µl of serum was subjected to 20 cycles of RT-PCR, after which the product was serially diluted 1:10 and 1 µl was amplified for another 35 cycles with primers specific for the serum (S)- or brain (B)-derived strain. As seen, in brain tissue the approximate ratio of serum- to brain-derived strains was 1:102 to 1:103, while in serum the brain-derived virus was present at a level 3 to 5 logs lower than that of the major serum-derived virus. In the lymph node in patient 2 the ratio between the two strands was approximately 3 logs. Leftmost lane on each gel, 1-kb molecular ladder (Gibco/BRL).
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FIG. 9. mRNA phenotyping by RT-PCR of cells present in brain tissue from patients 1 to 3 (Pt 1 to Pt 3). Tested phenotypes were CD2 (T cells), CD14 (moncytes/macrophages), and CD19 (B cells). The studied tissues were medulla oblongata, cerebellum, and subcortical white matter in patients 1, 2, and 3, respectively. In addition, as a positive control, lymph node (LN) from patient 2 was analyzed. Tenfold serial dilutions of extracted RNA were tested; the amount of RNA loaded into the reaction mixture at dilution 100 corresponds to 1 µg. The expected product sizes were 266 bp for CD14, 547 bp for CD2, and 277 bp for CD19. As can be seen, expression of CD14 was found in all three brain samples, CD19 was not detected, and CD2 expression was found in the brain tissue sample from patient 1 (but the titer was low). To check the integrity of isolated RNA and to detect contaminating genomic DNA, ß-actin primers specific for two different exons separated by an intron were used. Amplification of genomic DNA results in a 607-bp product (not seen), while amplification of cDNA results in a 513-bp product.
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An important question is that of how the HCV got into the CNS. In theory, HCV could gain access to the brain by way of cerebrospinal fluid as occurs in visna virus infection (12). Alternatively, and more likely, neuroinvasion is related to trafficking of infected cells of monocyte/macrophage lineage through the blood-brain barrier, in a process similar to that postulated for HIV-1 infection (28, 35). Subsequently, there could be a secondary spread of HCV to permissive resident microglial cells within the brain. Replication in the CNS could be facilitated by immunosuppression, some degree of which was likely to be present in all of our patients. This possibility is supported by the observations that while HCV negative-strand RNA is rarely detected in PBMC from normal subjects (15, 24), it is commonly found in HIV-coinfected patients or liver transplant recipients (16, 30). Moreover, HCV replication was demonstrated in hematopoietic cells inoculated into severe combined immunodeficiency mice (5). However, HCV replication in bone marrow was also found in some obviously immunocompetent subjects (29, 31).
The observed concomitant infection of the same host by two different HCV strains, each replicating in a different compartment, is probably the consequence of coinfection or superinfection with strains manifesting different tropisms for different cells. For example, it has been demonstrated for lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus that strains differing by a single amino acid substitution, when inoculated together into a mouse, are competitively selected either by the liver and spleen or by neurons (9). We have recently reported that infection with multiple HCV strains results in rapid predominance of a single strain that presumably replicates in the liver and that all other strains are either eliminated or constitute a tiny fraction of circulating virions (21). It is thus possible that HCV adaptation to an extrahepatic niche may be a strategy to elude competitive exclusion by the dominant strain that replicates in the liver.
In the present study the HCV negative-strand RNA was detected in one site of the brain in each of the three patients. However, as the titer of the replicating virus seemed to be low, replication may have been present at other brain sites but below the level of detection. This could be compounded by the fact that the studied biological material constituted autopsy tissues which were obtained within 36 h after death and therefore some RNA might have been degraded. Interestingly, HIV-1, which undoubtedly infects brain microglia cells, is also not uniformly detected throughout the brain, even in the same subjects (2, 4).
In summary, we found evidence of HCV replication in CNS autopsy samples from three out of six studied patients. However, the consequences of this are presently unclear.
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