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Discovery of significant variants containing large deletions in the 5'UTR of human hepatitis C virus (HCV)

Dennis Revie1 email, Michael O Alberti1 email, Ravi S Braich2,4 email, David Bayles2 email, John G Prichard3 email and S Zaki Salahuddin2 email

Department of Biology, California Lutheran University, Thousand Oaks, California, USA

California Institute of Molecular Medicine, Ventura, California, USA

Ventura County Medical Center, Ventura, California, USA

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

author email corresponding author email

Virology Journal 2006, 3:82doi:10.1186/1743-422X-3-82

Published: 29 September 2006

Abstract

We recently reported the isolation and in vitro replication of hepatitis C virus. These isolates were termed CIMM-HCV and analyzed to establish genotypes and subtypes, which are reported elsewhere. During this analysis, an HCV isolated from a patient was discovered that had large deletions in the 5'UTR. 57% of the HCV RNA found in this patient's sera had 113 or 116 bp deletions. Sequence data showed that domains IIIa to IIIc were missing. Previous studies have suggested that these domains may be important for translation. In vitro replicated HCV from this patient did not contain these deletions, however, it contained a 148 bp deletion in the 5'UTR. Whereas the patient HCV lacked domains IIIa through IIIc, the isolate lacked domains IIIa through IIId. HCV from this patient continues to produce large deletions in vitro, suggesting that the deletion may not be important for the assembly or replication of the virus. This is the first report describing these large deletions.


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