Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the major cause of parenterally transmitted non-A, non-B hepatitis. The analysis of the genomic sequence of HCV has facilitated the development of a number of diagnostic assays for testing circulating antibodies in serum from patients with HCV infection. Besides the first-generation ELISA and RIBA, which employed the C100-3 non-structural polypeptide, second-generation tests employing both structural and non-structural polypeptides are being rapidly introduced. Several coded panels were employed in a comparative study of HCV-SP ELISA (utilizing a new synthetic peptide whose sequence was derived from the structural region) along with first- and second-generation tests. On the basis of the results, evidently antigens corresponding to the structural components of the virus are more sensitive and specific for the early detection of HCV antibodies than tests using non-structural epitopes. Additionally epitopes of the structural region elicit a very strong antibody response in laboratory animals. An example of one such application is the detection of HCV specific antigens in semen from patients diagnosed with non-A, non-B (NANB) hepatitis. Semen samples from 9 patients clinically diagnosed as having NANB hepatitis were tested by an ELISA using antibodies against HCV-specific structural antigens. The semen from all 9 patients had HCV-specific structural antigens in comparison to semen from 5 healthy donors. Semen from 5 of the 9 patients had significant levels of the HCV-specific antigen. This approach to detecting HCV antigens could, if rigorously tested, evolve into promising new assays for detecting HCV.

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