Presence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) genomic RNA and viral replicative intermediates in bone marrow and peripheral blood mononuclear cells from HCV-infected patients.

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The cellular tropism of hepatitis C virus (HCV) was studied in vivo in samples from patients with persistent HCV infection. Plasma, liver, peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC), and bone marrow cell (BMC) samples from 15 subjects positive for anti-HCV antibodies were tested for the presence of HCV RNA sequences by reverse transcription PCR. Virus-specific RNA sequences were found to be present in liver samples from all subjects (100%), in plasma samples from 13 of 15 patients (86.7%), in PBMC samples from 3 patients (20%), and in BMC samples from 9 (60%) of the 15 anti-HCV-positive patients enrolled in this study. The presence of the molecular intermediate of HCV replication (the negative-stranded HCV RNA) was evident in the two of the three PBMC and in five of the nine BMC HCV RNA-positive samples. Finally, we studied the nucleotide sequence of a large portion (-270 to -59) of the 5'untranslated region of HCV amplified from plasma samples of 12 of the 15 patients with and without HCV in BMCs; the degree of heterogeneity compared with the prototype HCV sequence was similar in both groups. The data principally indicate that HCV infection of PBMCs and BMCs is frequent in persistently infected patients, as shown by the occurrence of positive- and negative-stranded HCV RNA, thus suggesting the possibility of extrahepatic replication of HCV.

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