Publication: Frequency and genotype diversity of human pegiviruses (HPgV) in people infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
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Yücebağ-Duranay, Ebru
Kocazeybek, Bekir Sami
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Abstract
Objective: Human pegiviruses (HPgV) belong to the Flaviviridae family. They were initially considered hepatotropic viruses, but later, epidemiological studies showed no connection with acute or chronic hepatitis. This study included frozen and stored plasma samples of HIV-infected, ART-naive patients, which were routinely sent to Cerrahpasa Faculty of Medicine, Molecular Microbiology Laboratory for HIV RNA detection and HIV drug resist-ance analysis between January and September 2019. Materials and Methods: The study analyzed plasma samples of HIV-infected, antiretroviral therapy-naive patients and control serum samples. HPgV RNA in the samples was inves-tigated using the RT-nested PCR method, and primer sets designed from the 5’UTR region were used for amplification and genotyping using Sanger sequencing. Results: A total of 117 plasma samples from HIV-infected, antiretroviral therapy-naive patients and 100 control serum samples were included in the study. HPgV-1 RNA was detected in 24.78% of the patient group and 18% of the control group (p=0.2264). HPgV-2 RNA was not detected in any groups. Phylogenetic analysis showed that all HPgV-1 strains isolated were genotype 2; the subgroup was commonly 2a (95.56%). Only two of the 29 strains be-longing to the patient group were subtype 2b (4.44%). There was no statistically significant difference between HPgV-1 infected and uninfected HIV-1-positive subjects regarding the HIV-1 viral loads. HPgV-1 positivity rates were higher in those aged <40 years (25.80%) than in those aged ≥40 years (16.12%) (p=0.00044). Conclusion: Genotype 2a was identified as the dominant genotype, and this finding is consistent with previous studies reported from Türkiye and other countries in the same geo-graphical region. Further studies are needed to understand better the effects of the HPgV-1 virus on HIV infection.
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DOC Design and Informatics
Subject
Medicine, Infectious diseases
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Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology
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DOI
10.36519/idcm.2025.497
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CC BY-NC (Attribution-NonCommercial)
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Creative Commons license
Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as CC BY-NC (Attribution-NonCommercial)

