Determination of human cytomegalovirus genetic diversity in different patient populations in Costa Rica

Authors

  • Sara Ahumada-Ruiz University of Panama; Faculty of Natural Sciences and Technology; Department of Microbiology and Parasitology; Experimental and Applied Laboratory
  • Lizeth Taylor-Castillo Louisiana State University-International Center for Medical Research and Training
  • Kirsten Visoná Louisiana State University-International Center for Medical Research and Training
  • Ronald B. Luftig Louisiana State University-International Center for Medical Research and Training
  • Libia Herrero-Uribe University of Costa Rica; Faculty of Microbiology; Laboratory of Virology

Keywords:

Human cytomegalovirus, Glycoprotein B, Polymerase chain reaction, Single stranded conformation polymorphism, Sequencing

Abstract

Seroprevalence of HCMV in Costa Rica is greater than 95% in adults; primary infections occur early in life and is the most frequent congenital infection in newborns. The objectives of this study were to determine the genetic variability and genotypes of HCMV gB gene in Costa Rica. Samples were collected from alcoholics, pregnant women, blood donors, AIDS patients, hematology-oncology (HO) children and HCMV isolates from neonates with cytomegalic inclusion disease. A semi-nested PCR system was used to obtain a product of 293-296 bp of the gB gene to be analyzed by Single Stranded Conformational Polymorphism (SSCP) and sequencing to determine the genetic polymorphic pattern and genotypes, respectively. AIDS patients showed the highest polymorphic diversity with 14 different patterns while fifty-six percent of HO children samples showed the same polymorphic pattern, suggesting in this group a possible nosocomial infection. In neonates three genotypes (gB1, gB2 and gB3), were determined while AIDS patients and blood donors only showed one (gB2). Of all samples analyzed only genotypes gB1, 2 and 3 were determined, genotype gB2 was the most frequent (73%) and mixed infections were not detected. The results of the study indicate that SSCP could be an important tool to detect HCMV intra-hospital infections and suggests a need to include additional study populations to better determine the genotype diversity and prevalence.

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Published

2004-04-01

Issue

Section

Virology

How to Cite

Ahumada-Ruiz, S., Taylor-Castillo, L., Visoná, K., Luftig, R. B., & Herrero-Uribe, L. (2004). Determination of human cytomegalovirus genetic diversity in different patient populations in Costa Rica . Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 46(2), 87-92. https://revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/30792