Hepatitis C virus (HCV) has high genomic variability and, since its discovery, at least six different types and an increasing number of subtypes have been reported. Genotype 1 is the most prevalent genotype found in South America. In the present study, three different genomic regions (59UTR, core and NS5B) of four HCV strains isolated from Peruvian patients were sequenced in order to investigate the congruence of HCV genotyping for these three genomic regions. Phylogenetic analysis using 59UTR-core sequences found strain PE22 to be related to subtype 1b. However, the same analysis using the NS5B region found it to be related to subtype 1a. To test the possibility of genetic recombination, phylogenetic studies were carried out, revealing that a crossover event had taken place in the NS5B protein. We discuss the consequences of this observation on HCV genotype classification, laboratory diagnosis and treatment of HCV infection.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an important human pathogen that affects 170 million people worldwide. The HCV genome is an RNA molecule that is approximately 9?6 kb in length and encodes a polyprotein that is cleaved proteolytically to generate at least 10 mature viral proteins. Recently, a new HCV protein named F has been described, which is synthesized as a result of a ribosomal frameshift. Little is known about the biological properties of this protein, but the possibility that the F protein may participate in HCV morphology or replication has been raised. In this work, the presence of functional constraints in the F protein was investigated. It was found that the rate of amino acid substitutions along the F protein was significantly higher than the rate of synonymous substitutions, and comparisons involving genes that represented independent phylogenetic lineages yielded very different divergence/conservation patterns. The distribution of stop codons in the F protein across all HCV genotypes was also investigated; genotypes 2 and 3 were found to have more stop codons than genotype 1. The results of this work suggest strongly that the pattern of divergence in the F protein is not affected by functional constraints.
From June 2004 to October 2007, 34 patients with chronic heart failure and low ejection fraction underwent surgical revascularization; 23 received bypass grafting plus transplantation of bone marrow-derived stem cells (study group) and 11 had revascularization only (control group). The stem cells were implanted into nonviable myocardial areas, bypass grafting was performed in viable myocardial areas. In the study group, the ejection fraction increased from the baseline 26.4% ± 4% to 37.3% ± 11.5% after 26 months. In the control group, ejection fraction increased from 29% ± 2% to 31.5% ± 4.3% after 27 months. The improvement in the study group was significantly greater than that in the control group. Functional class improved significantly from 3.2 to 1.2 in the study group vs. 3.0 to 2.3 in the control group. Stem cell transplantation associated with bypass grafting is feasible and safe in patients with chronic heart failure with low ejection fractions, and it improves ventricular systolic function and functional class.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.