The DNA genomes of four new human papillomaviruses, HPV 75, HPV 76, HPV 77, and HPV 80, have been cloned, sequenced, and characterized. HPV 75, HPV 76 (both HPV 49-related), and HPV 77 (HPV 29-related) were isolated from benign cutaneous warts and HPV 80 (HPV 15-related) from histologically normal skin. HPV 77 has also been demonstrated in dysplastic warts and squamous cell carcinomas of the skin. The sequence data presented in this study led to a proposed modification of the definition of a new HPV type. The high degree of DNA sequence similarity between the E7 ORF of HPV 77 and HPV 29 (97.7%), as opposed to the E6 (82.8%) and L1 (85.3%) ORFs, might suggest conservation of a specific function or a possible recombinational event. Only the E6 and L1 ORFs of HPV 75 and HPV 76 have a similarity lower than 90%, whereas the DNA sequences of their upstream regulatory regions (URRs) share a similarity of 93%. The E7, E1, and E4 ORFs, as well as the URR of HPV 15 and HPV 80, share sequence similarities higher than 90%. Such a divergence in the similarity between different segments of the virus genomes of closely related HPV types has not been noted to date. A detailed comparative sequence analysis was performed. HPV 75, HPV 76, and HPV 80 revealed features characteristic of truly cutaneous HPV types, whereas HPV 77 shared several characteristics with the mucosal HPV types, some of which may have functional consequences.
Cholesteatoma of the middle ear is a relatively common disorder, often with severe consequences. Histologically, the aggressively growing, bone-destructing form shows papillary growth and koilocytosis, which are characteristic of papillomavirus-induced lesions. A PCR (polymerase chain reaction) method using degenerate primers for the detection of any known or as yet unknown HPV (human papillomavirus) type was applied in screening 51 biopsies from 42 patients. A resulting 36% (16/45) of the cholesteatomas were found to contain papillomavirus DNA, which hybridized under stringent conditions with an HPV-II DNA probe. In 3 cases the presence of HPV-II DNA could be confirmed by sequencing the PCR products. The mere presence of this HPV DNA does not prove an etiological role of this group of viruses in the induction of cholesteatomas. It does, however, identify another group of human proliferative lesions putatively linked to papillomavirus infections.
The interaction between Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae and Influenza A-virus in experimentally infected miceModels for infecting mice with Influenza A-Virus (A/PR 8/34, HON1) and Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae (serotype 9) were developed in Han : NMRI-mice.After infecting mice with sublethal doses of one of the infectious agents, or both together as a mixed infection, animals were subsequently exsanguated and the lungs washed by bronchoalveolar lavage. Clinical symptoms were recorded daily, examination of lung lavage fluid and sera as well as histology of the lungs were done.An increase in mortality, weight reduction and total cell yield of lung lavage fluid was observed after mixed infection. Compared to mixed infections total protein content and elastase in sera and lung lavage fluid after singular ones were raised not as much. In lung lavage fluid the total cell yield was increased more marked. These alterations indicate a synergistic effect of viruses and bacteria, developed by mixed infection as well as a bacterial infection on top of a viral one.Histopathologically the lung alterations were found to depend on the infectious agent and the mode of infection.
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