Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Structural and nonstructural regions of the HCV-encoded polyprotein have been expressed in recombinant yeast, bacteria, or insect cells and used to capture and measure reactive antibodies circulating in different individuals. The putative nucleocapsid protein (C) and nonstructural proteins 3-5 (NS3-NS5) were found to contain the most immunodominant epitopes. The NS3, NS4, and C regions were expressed in yeast in the form of a fused, chimeric polyprotein (C25) and a capture assay for reactive antibody was developed. This anti-C25 assay detects all previously identified HCV-seropositive cases and provides a substantially more sensitive diagnostic for both acute and chronic HCV infections than the current anti-C100-3 (NS4) assay. Anti-C25 was detected more frequently than anti-C100-3 in chronic, transfusion-associated non-A, non-B hepatitis patients from the United States (95% vs. 71%) and Japan (98% vs. 82%), in cryptogenic cirrhosis patients from the United States (62% vs. 28%), and in hepatitis B surface antigen-negative cases of hepatocellular carcinoma from Japan (83% vs. 63%). These data indicate that HCV has a greater role in these liver diseases than was previously thought. In volunteer United States blood donors sampled following the introduction of anti-C100-3 screening, the prevalence of anti-C25 and anti-C100-3 was 0.5% and 0.08%, respectively.
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PMID:Diagnosis of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection using an immunodominant chimeric polyprotein to capture circulating antibodies: reevaluation of the role of HCV in liver disease. 127 66

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a recently described causative agent of the great majority of post-transfusion non A-non B hepatitis and is classified within the Flaviviridae family. Due to a high prevalence of anti-HCV and other flaviviruses circulating in Brazil, such as dengue and yellow fever, we investigated the possibility of serological cross-reactivity between these viruses. Different panels of human sera positive for dengue type 1 (9 cases) and type 2 (7 cases) from 6 patients naturally infected with yellow fever and from 94 adults vaccinated against the 17D strain of yellow fever were tested against HCV antigens used in diagnostic assays. Two enzyme immunoassay systems were tested: one, an in-house test using recombinant antigens from core, NS3 and NS5 regions of the HCV genome (Research Foundation for Microbial Disease of Osaka University, Japan); and another, using synthetic peptides representing immunodominant epitopes of structural core and non-structural NS4 and NS5 HCV regions (INNOTEST HCV Ab, Innogenetics, Belgium). A line immunoassay (INNO-LIA HCV Ab, Innogenetics, Belgium) was used as a confirmatory test. In this, HCV antigens are coated as discrete lines on a nylon strip with plastic backing. Besides 4 control lines on each strip, a total of 6 HCV lines are present: line A consists of several NS4 epitopes, line B consists of several NS5 epitopes and lines C-F contain several core epitopes. This test not only confirms but differentiates antibodies to hepatitis C virus. No positive results were detected with these tests, indicating that hepatitis C infection can be evaluated by current assays in regions where flaviviruses are endemic.
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PMID:Human antibodies to dengue and yellow fever do not react in diagnostic assays for hepatitis C virus. 128 68

Serological markers for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were measured in serial samples from 14 posttransfusion chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis patients by a semiquantitative dot blot immunoassay. The assay detected antibodies to HCV by use of recombinant proteins that represent putative HCV capsid (core), nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) (33c), and NS4 (c100) epitopes. Seroconversion to anti-HCV antibodies (anti-HCV) was detected in all patients. The average time to active antibody production detected by any of the recombinant proteins was 13.8 (range, 3.6 to 22.0) weeks posttransfusion or 4.6 (range, -4.5 to 13.4) weeks after the first biochemical marker of illness. Anti-HCV were detected earliest by the core antigen in most cases; however, the patterns of anti-HCV responses varied significantly among individuals. Overall, the addition of the core and NS3 antigens to the assay enabled the detection of the antibody response 4 to 5 weeks earlier than did the addition of the c100 antigen, the sole antigen used in current screening tests in the United States. Passively transferred antibodies were detected by at least one antigen in early posttransfusion samples from 12 patients and decayed below detectable levels for all antigens in only 2 patients. Antibodies to all three gene products were evident in the last sample from all five patients monitored for greater than 3 years from transfusion indicating the persistence of antibodies in patients with chronic illness. Our data show that the period following the onset of hepatitis during which anti-HCV are not detected by current screening assays can be greatly shortened by the detection of anti-HCV responses by a combination of core, NS3, and c100 antigens.
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PMID:Serological markers of posttransfusion hepatitis C viral infection. 137 18

A screening assay for the detection of antibodies to hepatitis C virus (HCV); ORTHO HCV ELISA Test System, Second Generation, was compared with the currently licensed c100-3 based test (ORTHO HCV ELISA Test System). The second generation ELISA differs from the c100-3 based assay in that it detects circulating antibodies to both structural (nucleocapsid) and non-structural (NS3/NS4) HCV proteins. Specimens tested consisted of a cohort of 35 patients diagnosed with non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANBH) and 3971 presumably healthy volunteer blood donors. Second generation ELISA demonstrated significantly greater clinical sensitivity in patients with acute phase NANBH (80% vs. 60%) as well as chronic disease (88% vs. 72%). Additional specimens reactive only in second generation ELISA, demonstrated reactivity to HCV antigens c33c and/or c22-3 in supplemental testing by the Chiron HCV RIBA Assay System. The second generation ELISA also detected additional RIBA reactive volunteer blood donors (0.18% of the population tested) that were nonreactive in first generation ELISA. This data indicated that second generation ELISA would detect approximately 2 additional anti-HCV reactive donors per 1,000 screened. Specificities obtained with this low risk population were 99.6% for first generation and 99.7% for second generation ELISA.
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PMID:Improved detection of antibodies to hepatitis C virus using a second generation ELISA. 138 Nov 39

The sera of 36 French patients with post-transfusional and sporadic non-A, non-B (NANB) chronic hepatitis were investigated, with a combination of serological and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays, for HBV and HCV infections. Eighty-nine percent of the patients were found positive with serological and/or molecular tests. Among the positive patients, 68% (22/32) were found positive for both anti-HCV and HCV-RNA, 16% (5/32) and 16% (5/32) were found positive only for anti-HCV or HCV-RNA, respectively. HBV-DNA sequences were detected in two patients associated to the HCV viraemia. This study confirms the extremely high prevalence of HCV infection in NANB chronic hepatitis in France. It also shows the possible co-infection by HCV and HBV in NANB hepatitis. We have also determined the nucleotide sequence of the 5' non-coding, E1, E2/NS1 and NS3/NS4 regions of a French isolate using the polymerase chain reaction. Comparison of these nucleotide sequences with those available from American and Japanese isolates showed a significant genetic variability. The genetic variability is higher in the E2/NS1 (13 to 33% and 12 to 30% at the nucleic acid and amino acid level, respectively) than in the E1 (10 to 28% and 7 to 21%) and NS3/NS4 (5 to 21% and 2 to 7%) regions. The sequence of the French isolate is more closely related to that of the American HCV prototype than to the Japanese HCV isolates. This study confirms the extent of HCV genetic variability.
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PMID:Hepatitis C virus (HCV)-RNA in non-A, non-B chronic hepatitis in France. Nucleotide sequence of a French HCV isolate. 166 29

Eight of 13 Swedish patients (62%), studied prospectively, who developed posttransfusion non-A, non-B hepatitis (PT-NANBH) had earlier been found to seroconvert for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) c100-3 in the first-generation anti-HCV enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay 1-18 (mean, 8) weeks after onset of hepatitis. By using a second-generation test utilizing antigens encoded by the core NS3 and NS4 region of HCV, a further four patients non-reactive to c100-3 (NS4) were found to seroconvert. Thus 12 of 13 (92%) Swedish patients with PT-NANBH were shown to have HCV infection. In addition, the serologic reactivity for several individual synthetic peptides and/or recombinant HCV proteins was studied in seven anti-HCV c100-3 seroconverts studied long-term after onset of acute PT-HCV infection. No special patterns were found that could differentiate patients who recovered from those who developed chronic HCV infection. It was concluded that the addition of new recombinant antigens derived from the core and NS3 region to c100-3 (NS4) both improved the sensitivity of the anti-HCV test and shortened the window phase to seroconversion.
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PMID:Antibodies to recombinant and synthetic peptides derived from the hepatitis C virus genome in long-term-studied patients with posttransfusion hepatitis C. 172 48

The detection of antibody to the hepatitis C virus C100-3 antigen from the nonstructural region (NS3/NS4) of the viral genome was the first useful marker developed to detect past or potentially active infection with the hepatitis C virus. A systematic epitope survey of the nonstructural region has uncovered other immunogenic antigens. In order to assess the possible diagnostic utility of these antigens, their reactivity against a limited panel of sera from patients with chronic liver disease due to hepatitis C virus and other etiologies was tested. Antibody assays were performed using an immunoblot plaque assay and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In a study of 16 C100-3-reactive individuals, all 16 patients were reactive using the plaque assay for the NS3 3' (409-1-1) and NS3 5' (C33u). In this same group of patients, antibodies by ELISA were reactive to NS3 3' in 12 of 16 patients (75%), NS3 5' in 15 of 16 patients (93%), and a capsid antigen (NC450) in 14 of 16 patients. In a group of five patients who were diagnosed with cryptogenic liver disease (C100-3 negative), 4 of 5 patients were reactive for antibody to all of the above epitopes. In a survey of 23 patients with other forms of chronic liver disease (nonviral liver disease, hepatitis B, alcoholic liver disease, cholestatic liver disease, and autoimmune hepatitis), only 1 of 23 patients was reactive for antibody to the C100-3 and 4 of 23 patients were reactive for antibodies to structural and nonstructural regions of the virus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Variation in antibody reactivity to the hepatitis C virus by comparative immunoscreening and enzyme immunoassay. 768 14

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) antigen expression was examined by immunohistochemical staining in liver tissue taken at biopsy from 8 anti-HCV positive patients. Frozen liver sections were stained by indirect immunofluorescence for capsid, E2/NS1, NS3, NS4 and NS5 using polyclonal antibodies raised to synthetic peptides from these regions. The antigens E2 and NS3 were localised in scattered hepatocytes and also in cells within and around areas of inflammation. A weaker signal was observed for NS4 and NS5 and no signal was seen for capsid antigen. No staining was seen in liver tissue from 9 individuals, including 3 hepatitis B virus-positive and 2 hepatitis delta virus/positive patients, who were negative for serological markers of HCV. The specificity of the staining reaction was also confirmed by the lack of staining in HCV-positive liver samples, after the antisera was pre-adsorbed against the specific peptide. Collectively, the data suggests that HCV may not only be hepatotropic but also lymphotropic, and this may be an important factor in the pathogenesis of HCV infection.
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PMID:Localisation of hepatitis C virus proteins in infected liver tissue by immunofluorescence. 768 8

Twenty patient, multitransfused 52 to 113 days before development of acute non-A, non-B viral hepatitis, were studied. In all of them UBI-HCV and Liatek tests (Organon) were performed in second day of hospitalization, and were repeated after 3 and 6 months. In 17 cases (85%) viral hepatitis C were diagnosed. In another three patients, hepatitis was probably caused by unidentified, non-A, non-B, non-C virus. The most frequently observed type of reactivity was parallel appearance of anti-HCV to structural and non-structural antigens in Liatek test (from 35% in first, to 70.6% in last investigation). Several patterns of combinations of serologic reactivity were observed. The most frequent anti-HCV were antibodies against structural, and anti-NS4 antigens. Chronic hepatitis developed in 65% of patients with hepatitis C.
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PMID:[Post-transfusion viral hepatitis non-A, non-B; serologic analysis of hepatitis C infections]. 769 20

The serodiagnosis of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection was analyzed by a recombinant immunoblot assay (RIBA) with recombinant proteins encoded by the viral RNA isolated from our patients in Hamburg, Germany. The HCV RNA was amplified by PCR, and proteins encoded by the viral core and the NS3, NS4, and NS5 regions were expressed subsequently in Escherichia coli. The results obtained with our UKE RIBA were compared with the results of the Abbott HCV second-generation enzyme immunoassay (EIA). Serum samples from 270 patients, which were sent to us on the suspicion of HCV hepatitis and which were negative for hepatitis A virus and hepatitis B virus antibodies, were examined. In 227 cases (84.1%), there were identical positive (204 cases, 75.6%) or negative (23 cases, 8.5%) results in both tests. In 32 cases (11.9%), the reactive Abbott second-generation HCV EIA results could not be confirmed by the UKE RIBA and the HCV PCR. In follow-up studies conducted over 1 year, these results did not change. In three cases (1.1%), the UKE RIBA presented a positive result while the Abbott second-generation HCV EIA was negative. All three cases were positive in the HCV PCR and showed seroconversion in an HCV EIA 4 to 6 weeks later. In addition, 33 patient serum samples were examined by UKE RIBA in parallel with the Ortho RIBA 2.0. In three cases (9.1%), a positive Ortho RIBA 2.0 result could not be confirmed by the UKE RIBA and the HCV PCR. All three patients were free of complaints. The UKE RIBA showed also a smaller number of indeterminate results (3.0%) than the Ortho RIBA 2.0 (24.2%). This comparison study demonstrates that the commercially available HCV antibody tests should be further improved.
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PMID:Study on reliability of commercially available hepatitis C virus antibody tests. 775 66


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