Abstract

Human herpesvirus-6 (HHV6) is a lymphotropic virus genetically related to human cytomegalovirus (CMV) and for which two variants, A and B, have been distinguished. Human CMV is usually cultivated with human fibroblasts (HF). The lack of cell lines useful for HHV6 isolation and propagation led us to investigate whether HHV6 variants A and B could infect HFs as CMV does. Isolates of HHV6 variants A and B were used to infect MRC-5 HFs. HHV6 infection was detected by means of immunoperoxidase assay using three specific monoclonal antibodies. HHV6-specific antigens were detected in 88 and 38% of cases after infection with variants A and B, respectively. The highest number of HHV6-antigen-positive cells was obtained at 4-5 days p.i. The titre of HHV6 stocks was determined in parallel by immunoperoxidase assay on HFs and by observation of cytopathic effect using serial dilutions on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). The number of infectious particles inducing the appearance of antigen-positive HF cells was consistently lower than the titre of virus stocks, expressed as TCID50. The amount of HF-associated HHV6 DNA was measured using limiting dilution PCR assay; it was significantly increased during 4-day infection in the case of variant A but not variant B. The yield of virus from infected HFs was demonstrated only for variant A by the serial propagation of virus from HFs to PBMCs and by the increase in cell-free HHV6 DNA in HF culture supernatant. Our results show that HHV6 can reproducibly infect HFs, albeit at a low level, and that HFs are more permissive to variant A than to variant B, as reported previously for PBMCs and human T-cell lines.

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