Viruses (Mar 2016)

Searching for Common Mammalian Retroviruses in Pediatric Idiopathic Diseases

  • Eric Jeziorski,
  • Vincent Foulongne,
  • Catherine Ludwig,
  • Djamel Louhaem,
  • Michel Rodiere,
  • Marc Sitbon,
  • Valérie Courgnaud

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v8030086
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. 86

Abstract

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Mammalian retroviruses cause a variety of diseases in their hosts, including hematological and immunodeficiency disorders. Both human T-cell leukemia (HTLV) and human immunodeficiency (HIV) viruses originated from several independent zoonotic transmissions, indicating that cross-species transmissions from animal to humans may still occur. Thus, as the risk for retroviral transmissions from animals to humans increase, we investigated whether mammalian retroviruses are involved in selected pediatric idiopathic diseases whose symptoms evoke retroviral infections. Blood samples, sera, and synovial fluids, or bone marrow cells were collected from pediatric patients under 18 years of age with different autoimmune idiopathic diseases. Overall, we screened clinical samples from 110 children using sensitive nested and semi-nested PCR strategies targeting env genes, and a C-type retrovirus reverse transcriptase (RT) activity kit. All clinical samples were free of retroviral signatures, indicating the unlikelihood of an etiological role of the retroviruses we assessed in the pediatric diseases we tested.

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