Abstract

Human parvovirus 4 (PARV4) has been detected in blood and diverse tissues samples from HIV/AIDS patients who are injecting drug users. Although B19 virus, the best characterized human parvovirus, has been shown to co-infect patients with hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus (HBV, HCV) infection, the association of PARV4 with HBV or HCV infections is still unknown.The aim of this study was to characterise the association of viruses belonging to PARV4 genotype 1 and 2 with chronic HBV and HCV infection in Shanghai.Serum samples of healthy controls, HCV infected subjects and HBV infected subjects were retrieved from Shanghai Center for Disease Control and Prevention (SCDC) Sample Bank. Parvovirus-specific nested-PCR was performed and results confirmed by sequencing. Sequences were compared with reference sequences obtained from Genbank to derive phylogeny trees.The frequency of parvovirus molecular detection was 16–22%, 33% and 41% in healthy controls, HCV infected and HBV infected subjects respectively, with PARV4 being the only parvovirus detected. HCV infected and HBV infected subjects had a significantly higher PARV4 prevalence than the healthy population. No statistical difference was found in PARV4 prevalence between HBV or HCV infected subjects. PARV4 sequence divergence within study groups was similar in healthy subjects, HBV or HCV infected subjects.Our data clearly demonstrate that PARV4 infection is strongly associated with HCV and HBV infection in Shanghai but may not cause increased disease severity.

Highlights

  • Parvovirus 4 (PARV4) is a DNA virus belonging to the Parvoviridae family, and was first identified in 2005 [1]

  • B19 and Bocavirus Real-time PCR Neither B19 nor HBoV were detected in serum samples from

  • To determine the association of PARV4 infection with HBV and HCV infection, we investigated the molecular prevalence of PARV4 in healthy individuals, HBV-infected subjects and HCV-infected subjects in Shanghai

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Summary

Introduction

Parvovirus 4 (PARV4) is a DNA virus belonging to the Parvoviridae family, and was first identified in 2005 [1]. PARV4 DNA has been detected in samples of pooled plasma from various manufacturers [2,3,4,5] in different countries. PARV4 DNA has been restricted to subjects with a parenteral exposure history suggesting a predominantly or exclusively parenteral route of transmission [4,6,7]. PARV4 DNA has been detected in blood samples from cadavers of injecting drug users who were HCV RNA positive [8]. Taken together with previous work showing that B19 is able to co-infect with HCV, this suggests that PARV4 might be able to co-infect with HCV with possible implications for disease severity

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