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Liver
Unit (CS, JMS-T, JCS, MB), Institut de Malalties Digestives, Department
of Medicine; and Department of Pathology (EC, TR), Hospital Clínic
Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS),
Universidad de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
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SUMMARY:
Drawbacks of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA detection in paraffin-embedded
liver tissue have satisfactorily been solved by RT-PCR amplification of
the 5'non-coding region (5'NCR). However, detection of this highly conserved
region does not provide information on epidemiological or pathogenetic
aspects of HCV infection. This study explores whether other functionally
important genetic regions of HCV, such as the hypervariable region 1 (HVR-1)
and the interferon sensitivity-determining region (ISDR), can be retrieved
from paraffin-embedded liver specimens by RT-PCR, and whether the amplified
material is suitable for further molecular analyses. RT-PCR amplification
of 5'NCR, HVR-1, and ISDR was assessed in RNA extracted from 50 formalin-fixed,
paraffin-embedded liver specimens, including 23 needle liver biopsies
(11 from patients with non-A, non-B chronic hepatitis diagnosed between
1971 and 1985, 8 from subjects with normal liver histology and 4 from
sequential biopsies from a patient with HCV recurrence after liver transplantation),
and 27 liver explants from patients undergoing transplantation between
1988 and 1996 (16 with HCV-related cirrhosis and 11 with other disorders).
The 5'NCR was successfully amplified in 8 of 11 (73%) non-A, non-B chronic
hepatitis biopsies and in all of the specimens from patients with serological
documentation of HCV infection. There were no false-positive results.
HCV genotype was identified by RFLP analysis of the 5'NCR in the 13 cases
analyzed. HVR-1 and ISDR were amplified in 24 of 28 (86%) samples, which
were positive for the 5'NCR. Efficient amplification was inversely related
to the time of storage. The evolutionary changes of HVR-1 and ISDR were
successfully analyzed by direct sequencing of amplificates from the explanted
liver and from the sequential liver biopsies in a patient with HCV infection
recurrence after transplantation. These observations indicate that paraffin-embedded
liver tissue, even when stored for more than 20 years, is appropriate
for advanced studies on the molecular biology of HCV.
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