Abstract

JC virus is a human polyomavirus that infects the majority of people without apparent symptoms in healthy subjects and it is the causative agent of progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy (PML), a disorder following lytic infection of oligodendrocytes that mainly manifests itself under immunosuppressive conditions. A hallmark for JC virus isolated from PML-brain is the presence of rearrangements in the non-coding control region (NCCR) interspersed between the early and late genes on the viral genome. Such rearrangements are believed to originate from the archetype JC virus which is shed in urine by healthy subjects and PML patients. We applied next generation sequencing to explore the non-coding control region variability in urine of healthy subjects in search for JC virus quasispecies and rearrangements reminiscent of PML. For 61 viral shedders (out of a total of 254 healthy subjects) non-coding control region DNA and VP1 (major capsid protein) coding sequences were initially obtained by Sanger sequencing. Deletions between 1 and 28 nucleotides long appeared in ∼24.5% of the NCCR sequences while insertions were only detected in ∼3.3% of the samples. 454 pyrosequencing was applied on a subset of 54 urine samples demonstrating the existence of JC virus quasispecies in four subjects (∼7.4%). Hence, our results indicate that JC virus DNA in urine is not always restricted to one unique virus variant, but can be a mixture of naturally occurring variants (quasispecies) reflecting the susceptibility of the non-coding control region for genomic rearrangements in healthy individuals. Our findings pave the way to explore the presence of viral quasispecies and the altered viral tropism that might go along with it as a potential risk factor for opportunistic secondary infections such as PML.

Highlights

  • Human polyoma viruses (HPyVs) are non-enveloped DNA viruses with a,5 kilobase pair circular, double-stranded DNA genome

  • JC virus (JCV) infection can result in a severe clinical outcome i.e. progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy (PML), an often fatal neurological disorder resulting from a demyelination process after lytic infection of oligodendrocytes [1,2]

  • In line with this view, several reports have demonstrated increased in vitro early gene transcription and viral replication driven by naturally occurring rearranged JCV non-coding control region (NCCR) sequences taken from PML-cases [17,22]

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Summary

Introduction

Human polyoma viruses (HPyVs) are non-enveloped DNA viruses with a ,5 kilobase pair circular, double-stranded DNA genome. Several members of this virus family are associated with human pathologies. PML occurs predominantly in patients suffering from immune deficiencies (e.g. HIV-patients) or patients undergoing immuno-modulatory therapies. PML-cases have been reported for patients treated with immuno-modulatory monoclonal antibodies such as natalizumab and rituximab [3,4]. BK virus (BKV), the polyomavirus most closely related to JCV, has been shown to be involved in nephropathy after kidney transplant and may be an opportunistic pathogen of the central nervous system [5,6,7]. Other human polyoma viruses such as Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV) and TSPyV have raised interest as oncogenic viruses [9,10,11]

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