Fujita Fumihiko, Yamashita-Futsuki Izumi, Eguchi Susumu, Kamohara Yukio, Fujioka Hikaru, Yanaga Katsuhiko, Furui Junichiro, Moriuchi Ryozo, Kanematsu Takashi, Katamine Shigeru
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, 1-7-1 Sakamoto, 852-8501, Nagasaki, Japan
Hepatol Res. 2003 Jun;26(2):106-113. doi: 10.1016/s1386-6346(03)00087-1.
The clinical use of organs and cells of pig donors as a source of tissue for xenotransplantation and extracorporeal therapies has been problematic due to the risk for zoonotic infection of porcine endogenous retroviruses (PERV). METHODS: The effect of human serum on PERV was evaluated using an infectivity assay and virolysis assay. Cell-free PERV infection to human 293 cells was determined by the presence of proviruses 5 days post-infection by a highly sensitive nested PCR, and the lysis of PERV virions was determined by the reverse transcriptase activities released into the supernatant. RESULTS: Treatment of PERV-PK, the culture supernatant of a pig kidney cell line containing the virus titer of 10(2.8) TCID(50) units/ml, with a quarter volume of human serum completely inactivated the infectivity. This activity was heat-labile and sensitive to an anti-complement agent, nafamostat mesilate, and a Ca(2+)-chelator, EGTA, indicating the crucial involvement of complement activated through the classical pathway. Since a synthetic galactosyl alpha1-3 galalactose (Galalpha1-3Gal) largely absorbed the activity from the serum, natural antibodies to the Galalpha1-3Gal epitopes are likely to trigger the complement activation. CONCLUSION: Cell-free PERV seems no longer be infectious in human serum. This greatly encourages the clinical application of pig tissues in particular for extracorporeal therapies such as a bioartificial liver, in which pig cells do not come in direct contact with a recipient.