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Title: Capsid protein VP1 deletions in JC virus from two AIDS patients with progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. Author: Stoner GL, Ryschkewitsch CF. Journal: J Neurovirol; 1995 Jun; 1(2):189-94. PubMed ID: 9222357. Abstract: PCR on 52 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens and 33 brain biopsies obtained from HIV-1 positive patients utilized pairs of primers from both the early region (JTP) and late region (JLP). In these patients, in whom progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) was suspected on the basis of clinical symptoms and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies, eight CSFs (15%) and 14 brain biopsy specimens (42%) contained JCV DNA sequences. In two patients' samples, the CSFs were positive for JCV DNA in the VP1 region using the primer pair for the VP1 region (JLP), but the fragment amplified migrated more rapidly than the 129-bp product obtained from prototype JCV(Mad-1) or the fragment amplified from the antigenic variant of JCV known as Mad-11. These patients died 3-4 months after onset of progressive neurological symptoms. Cycle sequencing of the fragments revealed overlapping deletions of 24 and 27 nucleotides. These strains were of different genotypes, designated strain 107 and strain 206. Computer analysis of the VP1 amino acid sequence predicts that the eight or nine amino acid residue deletions represent a surface loop with a high antigenic index. These naturally occurring deletion mutants are the first examples of a phenomenon observed experimentally in the mouse polyoma virus capsid protein VP2.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]