Title Frequency and significance of parvovirus B19 infection in patients with rheumatoid arthritis /
Authors Naciūtė, Milda ; Mieliauskaitė, Diana ; Rugienė, Rita ; Nikitenkienė, Rita ; Jančorienė, Ligita ; Mauricas, Mykolas ; Nora-Krukle, Zaiga ; Murovska, Modra ; Girkontaitė, Irutė
DOI 10.1099/jgv.0.000621
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Is Part of Journal of general virology.. London : Microbiology Society. 2016, vol. 97, no. 12, p. 3302-3312.. ISSN 0022-1317. eISSN 1465-2099
Keywords [eng] systemic-lupus-erythematosus ; primary sjogrens-syndrome ; necrosis-factor-alpha ; vp2 linear epitopes ; epstein-barr-virus ; bone-marrow ; immune-response ; protein antibodies ; aplastic crisis ; hydrops-fetalis
Abstract [eng] The present study aims to clarify the possible involvement of parvovirus B19 (B19V) infection in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) pathogenesis by investigating the presence of B19V infection markers (genomic sequences and virus-specific antibodies) in association with the level of cytokines and RA clinical activity and aggressiveness. A total of 118 RA patients and 49 ageand sex-matched healthy volunteers were enrolled in the study. Nested PCR was used to detect B19V sequences in whole blood and cell-free plasma DNA, ELISA to detect virusspecific antibodies and cytokine levels in plasma and recomLine dot blot assay for antibodies to separate B19V antigens. The detection frequency of B19V DNA was higher in patients with RA (25.4 %) in comparison with healthy persons (18.4 %). B19V DNA in cell-free plasma (B19+p) was detected significantly often in RA patients in comparison with healthy controls (13.6 vs 2 %; P=0.0002). RA B19+p patients had higher disease activity and aggressiveness, decreased haemoglobin and increased erythrocyte sedimentation rates. IL-6 plasma levels were significantly higher in RA patients than in controls. Within the RA patients’ group the IL-6 level was significantly increased in B19+p patients with disease activity scores of DAS28>5.2, high C-reactive protein and low haemoglobin. Contrary to the healthy controls, the majority of RA B19+p patients did not have antibodies to VP-1S (VP1u) and VP-N (N-terminal half of structural proteins VP1 and VP2), which correspond to the epitopes of neutralizing antibodies. These results indicate that B19V infection at least in some patients is involved in RA pathogenesis.
Published London : Microbiology Society
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2016
CC license CC license description