Lack of evidence for the transmission of JC polyomavirus between human populations

Archives of Virology - Tập 142 - Trang 875-882 - 2013
A. Kato1, T. Kitamura2, C. Sugimoto3, Y. Ogawa4, K. Nakazato5, K. Nagashima6, W. W. Hall7, K. Kawabe1, Y. Yogo3
1Department of Urology, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
2Department of Urology, Branch Hospital, Facultyof Medicine, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
3Department of Viral Infection, the Institute of Medical Science, the University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
4Department of Urology, Ryukyu University, Okinawa, Japan
5Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Ryukyu University, Okinawa, Japan
6Department of Pathology, Hokkaido University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan
7Virus Reference Laboratory, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

Tóm tắt

Human polyomavirus JC virus (JCV), the causative agent of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, is ubiquitous in humans, infecting children asymptomatically then persisting in renal tissue. Since JCV DNA can readily be detected from urine, it should be a useful tool with which to study the mode of virus transmission in humans. Based on this notion, we examined the extent to which JCV was transmitted from the American to Japanese populations in Okinawa Island, Japan. (A population of about 50 000 American soldiers and families have been stationed in Okinawa since 1945.) Four JCV types (A to D) were identified in American populations in U.S.A., whereas only type B was prevalent in elder Japanese in Okinawa who had reached adulthood by 1945. Thus, types A, C, and D served as indicators of the transmission of JCV from American to Japanese populations. We then examined whether types A, C, and D were detectable in Japanese in Okinawa aged 30–50 years who may have been in contact with Americans during childhood. However, all the 125 isolates from the younger Japanese population were type B without exception. From this finding, we concluded that JCV is rarely transmitted between human populations.