Literature DB >> 20947805

Adjuvant role of p53 immunostaining in detecting BK viral infection in renal allograft biopsies.

Wendy N Wiesend1, Raviparasenna Parasuraman, Wei Li, Maryam A Farinola, Michele T Rooney, Sharon K Hick, Dilip Samarapungavan, Steven R Cohn, Gampala H Reddy, Leslie L Rocher, Francis Dumler, Fan Lin, Ping L Zhang.   

Abstract

BK virus infection is a significant threat to renal transplant outcome. Detecting viral infection in renal transplant biopsies using SV40 staining is less than ideal. SV40 antibody reacts with the large T-antigen of BK virus only at the early phases of infection and can miss cells in later stages of infection. As p53 is upregulated during both early and late phases of infection, this study set out to determine whether p53 staining could improve detection of BK virus infection in renal transplant patients. The control group consisted of 16 renal allograft biopsies without histologic evidence of BK virus infection, while the BK group consisted of 15 renal allograft biopsies with histologic evidence of BK virus infection. The biopsies from both groups were immunohistochemically stained with both SV40 and p53 antibodies. Dual staining with both markers was also performed to identify their nuclear co-localization. In the BK group, the percent of p53 staining (16.6 ± 4.8 %) was significantly higher than the percent of SV40 staining (5.4 ± 2.7%). BK virus infected cells revealed a unique p53 immunostaining pattern (strong nuclear staining with a central halo). Co-localization of SV40 and p53 was identified in cells that had characteristic nuclear features of BK virus infection by histology. The sensitivity and specificity for using p53 staining to identify BK infected cells was 92% and 86 %, respectively. In conclusion, p53 staining detects a higher percentage of BK virus infected cells than SV40 staining alone. Thus, for diagnosis of BK virus infection in renal allograft biopsies, p53 staining is a sensitive and specific method when used along with SV40 staining.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20947805

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Clin Lab Sci        ISSN: 0091-7370            Impact factor:   1.256


  1 in total

1.  Case Report: Fatal Complications of BK Virus-Hemorrhagic Cystitis and Severe Cytokine Release Syndrome Following BK Virus-Specific T-Cells.

Authors:  Elizabeth M Holland; Corina Gonzalez; Elliot Levy; Vladimir A Valera; Heather Chalfin; Jacquelyn Klicka-Skeels; Bonnie Yates; David E Kleiner; Colleen Hadigan; Hema Dave; Haneen Shalabi; Dennis D Hickstein; Helen C Su; Michael Grimley; Alexandra F Freeman; Nirali N Shah
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-12-17       Impact factor: 7.561

  1 in total

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