In June 1991, a large outbreak of acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis occurred among students and teachers at 10 primary and 4 junior high schools in Katano City, Osaka, Japan. The outbreak affected > 4700 persons, lasted 5 days, and was believed to have been linked to contaminated food from a common supplier. Astrovirus, identified as the etiologic agent, was detected by direct electron microscopy in 10 of 38 fecal samples obtained from patients with diarrhea. Detection was confirmed by solid-phase immune electron microscopy (IEM), EIA, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, and virus isolation in CaCo-2 cells. Several patients who had astrovirus in their stool also demonstrated a significant antibody response to a reference strain of astrovirus by IEM and EIA and to their own isolate by IEM. Astrovirus can be an important agent of epidemic acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis in school-aged children and adults in Japan.
Some types of human papillomaviruses (HPV) appear to be associated with carcinoma of the cervix or other tissues, but patients infected with HPV do not necessarily develop carcinoma. Some epidemiological studies of risk factors for cervical carcinoma have indicated the involvement of herpes simplex virus (HSV). To study the effect of HSV on the genome of HPV, total DNAs were extracted and analyzed after HeLa cells, or A431 cells, transiently transfected with HPV18 DNA, were infected with HSV-1 or -2 for 24 hours. In HeLa cells, integrated HPV18 DNA was amplified almost threefold. In A431 cells, HPV 18 DNA fragments, sensitive to the restriction enzyme Mbo I, indicated newly replicated DNA. Replication intermediates were detected when the DNA was resolved by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. This study showed that HSV caused some amplification of HPV and indicated the possibility of HSV involved in the integration and amplification of HPV in host cells.
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