Abstract

B19 parvovirus, the cause of fifth disease and transient aplastic crisis, has been successfully propagated in suspension cultures of human erythroid bone marrow cells obtained from patients with sickle cell disease and stimulated by erythropoietin. B19 inoculation in vitro resulted in a marked decline in identifiable erythroid cells over seven to nine days of incubation. Characteristic giant early erythroid cells were seen on Wright's-Giemsa stain of infected cultures. By in situ hybridization, 30% to 40% of erythroblasts were infected at 48 hours; a similar proportion of cells showed B19 capsid protein by immunofluorescence. B19 DNA was present in erythroblasts but not in the leukocyte fraction of bone marrow. B19 replication, as determined by Southern analysis, and B19 encapsidation, as determined by sensitivity of isolated cell fractions to DNase I, were restricted to the nuclei. B19 DNA was detectable in the nuclei from infected cultures beginning at 18 hours and in the supernatant at 32 hours; B19 genome copy number was estimated at about 25,000 to 30,000/infected cell at 48 hours. Recovery of virus depended on the multiplicity of infection (moi); at low moi, approximately 200x input virus was recovered from total cultures and 50x from the culture supernatants. Virus released into the supernatant was as infectious or more infectious than virus obtained from sera of infected patients. Human erythroid bone marrow culture represents a safe in vitro system for the elucidation of the cellular and molecular biology of the pathogenic B19 parvovirus.

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