Lytic EBV infection investigated by detection of Soluble Epstein-Barr virus ZEBRA in the serum of patients with PTLD (original) (raw)
The ZEBRA protein (encoded by the BZLF1 gene), is the major transcription factor of EBV, expressed upon EBV lytic cycle activation. Several studies highlighted the critical role of EBV lytic infection as a risk factor for lymphoproliferative disorders like post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD). Here, we use an antigen-capture ELISA assay specifically designed to detecting the circulating soluble ZEBRA (sZEBRA) in serum samples (threshold value determined at 40ng/mL). We retrospectively investigated a population of 66 transplanted patients comprising 35 PTLD. All the samples from a control population (30 EBV-seronegative subjects and 25 immunocompetent individuals with EBV serological reactivation), classified as sZEBRA < 40ng/mL were assigned as negative. At PTLD diagnosis, EBV genome (quantified by qPCR with EBV DNA>200 copies/mL) and sZEBRA were detectable in 51% and 60% of cases, respectively. In the patients who developed a pathologically-confirmed PTLD, the m...
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