TRANSMISSION OF PORCINE ENDOGENOUS RETROVIRUSES IN SEVERE COMBINED IMMUNODEFICIENT MICE XENOTRANSPLANTED WITH FETAL …

YM Deng, BE Tuch, WD Rawlinson - Transplantation, 2000 - journals.lww.com
YM Deng, BE Tuch, WD Rawlinson
Transplantation, 2000journals.lww.com
Background. Xenotransplantationusing pig organs or tissues may alleviate the human donor
organ shortage. However, one concern is the potential transmission of pig pathogens to
humans, especially pig endogenous retroviruses (PERV), which infect human cell lines in
vitro. In this report, the cross-species in vivo transmission of PERV by xenotransplantation
was studied using a severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mouse model. Methods.
Twenty-one SCID mice were transplanted with fetal pig pancreatic cells and left for periods …
Abstract
Background.
Xenotransplantationusing pig organs or tissues may alleviate the human donor organ shortage. However, one concern is the potential transmission of pig pathogens to humans, especially pig endogenous retroviruses (PERV), which infect human cell lines in vitro. In this report, the cross-species in vivo transmission of PERV by xenotransplantation was studied using a severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mouse model.
Methods.
Twenty-one SCID mice were transplanted with fetal pig pancreatic cells and left for periods from three to 41 weeks before being killed. DNA and RNA were extracted from liver, spleen, and brain of these mice, and examined for PERV using nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and reverse transcriptase-PCR. The pig mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase II subunit gene (COII) was also amplified to monitor the presence of pig cell microchimerism in xenotransplanted tissues, and a housekeeping gene was included to monitor the DNA quality and quantity.
Results.
Examination of 39 DNA samples from tissues of the 21 xenografted mice identified two mouse tissues (M4-liver and M19-spleen) that were positive for PERV but negative for COII. A total of 23 (59%) of the mouse tissues were positive for both PERV and COII, 6 (16%) were negative for both, and 8 (20%) were positive for COII only. PCR and direct sequencing of the PCR products identified three PERV variants, which were different from the PERV sequence detected by PCR direct sequencing from the pig donor cells.
Conclusions.
The PERV+/COII− results from M4-liver and M19-spleen indicated the presence of PERV transmission from pig to mouse tissue. The PERV variants detected in the mouse tissues indicated that different PERVs were transmissible from the pig to mouse tissue during xenotransplantation. The negative reverse transcriptase-PCR results for PERV from three mouse samples including M4-liver and M19-spleen suggest there was no active PERV transcription in the mouse tissues, although this would need to be studied further.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins