Abstract
Hepatitis
C virus (HCV) antigen was detected immunohistochemically using
fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled immunoglobulin G fractions from
chimpanzee and human sera strongly reactive with recombinant hepatitis C
virus structural and nonstructural proteins. The antigen was localized
in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes in all 9 chimpanzees with acute
hepatitis C, in 5 of 10 chimpanzees with chronic HCV infection, and in
11 of 12 patients with chronic hepatitis C. The specificity of the
hepatocellular HCV and FITC-labeled probes for HCV was ascertained by
blocking studies with paired serum samples obtained from 8 infected and
uninfected chimpanzees or from 14 patients during the acute and chronic
phases of HCV infection. Absorption experiments on FITC-labeled probes
with selected host proteins (normal liver homogenate, plasma proteins,
red blood cells) did not indicate cross reactivity of the probes with
these antigens. Direct immunomorphologic evidence for the HCV
specificity of hepatocellular HCV antigen deposits and the FITC-labeled
polyclonal anti-HCV Ag probe was established in absorption experiments
using recombinant HCV nonstructural proteins. The putative HCV NS3
protein was the most prominent component of hepatocellular HCV antigen.
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