PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

JC Polyomavirus Abundance and Distribution in Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (PML) Brain Tissue Implicates Myelin Sheath in Intracerebral Dissemination of Infection.

  • Keith A Wharton,
  • Catherine Quigley,
  • Marian Themeles,
  • Robert W Dunstan,
  • Kathryn Doyle,
  • Ellen Cahir-McFarland,
  • Jing Wei,
  • Alex Buko,
  • Carl E Reid,
  • Chao Sun,
  • Paul Carmillo,
  • Gargi Sur,
  • John P Carulli,
  • Keith G Mansfield,
  • Susan V Westmoreland,
  • Susan M Staugaitis,
  • Robert J Fox,
  • Werner Meier,
  • Susan E Goelz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155897
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. e0155897

Abstract

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Over half of adults are seropositive for JC polyomavirus (JCV), but rare individuals develop progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), a demyelinating JCV infection of the central nervous system. Previously, PML was primarily seen in immunosuppressed patients with AIDS or certain cancers, but it has recently emerged as a drug safety issue through its association with diverse immunomodulatory therapies. To better understand the relationship between the JCV life cycle and PML pathology, we studied autopsy brain tissue from a 70-year-old psoriasis patient on the integrin alpha-L inhibitor efalizumab following a ~2 month clinical course of PML. Sequence analysis of lesional brain tissue identified PML-associated viral mutations in regulatory (non-coding control region) DNA, capsid protein VP1, and the regulatory agnoprotein, as well as 9 novel mutations in capsid protein VP2, indicating rampant viral evolution. Nine samples, including three gross PML lesions and normal-appearing adjacent tissues, were characterized by histopathology and subject to quantitative genomic, proteomic, and molecular localization analyses. We observed a striking correlation between the spatial extent of demyelination, axonal destruction, and dispersion of JCV along white matter myelin sheath. Our observations in this case, as well as in a case of PML-like disease in an immunocompromised rhesus macaque, suggest that long-range spread of polyomavirus and axonal destruction in PML might involve extracellular association between virus and the white matter myelin sheath.