| Literature DB >> 12004344 |
Antonella Grottola1, Paola Buttafoco, Maria Grazia Del Buono, Claudia Cremonini, Alessandra Colantoni, Roberta Gelmini, Cristina Morelli, Michele Masetti, Elio Jovine, Fiorenza Fruet, Antonio Pinna, Federico Manenti, Erica Villa.
Abstract
Liver transplantation (LT) in patients with hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection often is complicated by recurrence of infection despite immunoglobulin treatment. To evaluate whether variability in HBV genomic sequences and the target of antibody to hepatitis B surface antigen action in pre-LT samples may be associated with a high recurrence rate, HBV pre-S/S regions of 14 HBV-positive candidates for LT (in 9 of these patients, HBV infection subsequently recurred) were amplified and sequenced. Two hundred ninety-one mutations in 1,167 sequenced nucleotides (24.9%) were found. Of these, 120 mutations (10.2%) led to an amino-acid change. The only significant difference between patients with and without recurrent disease was in the number of mutations in the pre-S2 region (total mutations, P =.042; missense mutations, P =.012) of pre-LT HBV DNA. In addition, a difference in amino-acid level was present in the pre-S2 region (P =.030). The delay in HBV infection recurrence was proportional to the number of pre-LT HBV mutations in the pre-S2 and S genes: the higher the number, the longer the interval between LT and recurrence of infection (pre-S2, P =.0124; S, P =.0060; total number of mutations in S protein, P =.0421). In conclusion, pre-LT determination of pre-S/S gene sequence variability showed that heterogeneity of the pre-S2 and, to a lesser extent, S genes was associated with a greater chance for HBV recurrence. Modification of B-cell epitopes of S, but especially of pre-S2, protein leading to conformational changes and alterations in the viral encapsidation and secretion process may facilitate HBV recurrence and contribute to the failure of immune globulin therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12004344 DOI: 10.1053/jlts.2002.32719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Liver Transpl ISSN: 1527-6465 Impact factor: 5.799