Disease-associated XMRV sequences are consistent with laboratory contamination.
View / Open Files
Authors
Hué, Stéphane
Gray, Eleanor R
Gall, Astrid
Katzourakis, Aris
Tan, Choon Ping
Houldcroft, Charlotte J
McLaren, Stuart
Pillay, Deenan
Futreal, Andrew
Garson, Jeremy A
Pybus, Oliver G
Kellam, Paul
Towers, Greg J
Publication Date
2010-12-20Journal Title
Retrovirology
ISSN
1742-4690
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
7
Issue
1
Pages
111
Language
eng
Type
Article
Physical Medium
Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Hué, S., Gray, E. R., Gall, A., Katzourakis, A., Tan, C. P., Houldcroft, C. J., McLaren, S., et al. (2010). Disease-associated XMRV sequences are consistent with laboratory contamination.. Retrovirology, 7 (1), 111. https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-7-111
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Xenotropic murine leukaemia viruses (MLV-X) are endogenous gammaretroviruses that infect cells from many species, including humans. Xenotropic murine leukaemia virus-related virus (XMRV) is a retrovirus that has been the subject of intense debate since its detection in samples from humans with prostate cancer (PC) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Controversy has arisen from the failure of some studies to detect XMRV in PC or CFS patients and from inconsistent detection of XMRV in healthy controls. RESULTS: Here we demonstrate that Taqman PCR primers previously described as XMRV-specific can amplify common murine endogenous viral sequences from mouse suggesting that mouse DNA can contaminate patient samples and confound specific XMRV detection. To consider the provenance of XMRV we sequenced XMRV from the cell line 22Rv1, which is infected with an MLV-X that is indistinguishable from patient derived XMRV. Bayesian phylogenies clearly show that XMRV sequences reportedly derived from unlinked patients form a monophyletic clade with interspersed 22Rv1 clones (posterior probability >0.99). The cell line-derived sequences are ancestral to the patient-derived sequences (posterior probability >0.99). Furthermore, pol sequences apparently amplified from PC patient material (VP29 and VP184) are recombinants of XMRV and Moloney MLV (MoMLV) a virus with an envelope that lacks tropism for human cells. Considering the diversity of XMRV we show that the mean pairwise genetic distance among env and pol 22Rv1-derived sequences exceeds that of patient-associated sequences (Wilcoxon rank sum test: p = 0.005 and p < 0.001 for pol and env, respectively). Thus XMRV sequences acquire diversity in a cell line but not in patient samples. These observations are difficult to reconcile with the hypothesis that published XMRV sequences are related by a process of infectious transmission. CONCLUSIONS: We provide several independent lines of evidence that XMRV detected by sensitive PCR methods in patient samples is the likely result of PCR contamination with mouse DNA and that the described clones of XMRV arose from the tumour cell line 22Rv1, which was probably infected with XMRV during xenografting in mice. We propose that XMRV might not be a genuine human pathogen.
Keywords
Animals, DNA Contamination, DNA, Viral, Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic, Humans, Male, Mice, Molecular Sequence Data, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Prostatic Neoplasms, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Virology, Xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-7-111
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/283112
Statistics
Total file downloads (since January 2020). For more information on metrics see the
IRUS guide.
Recommended or similar items
The current recommendation prototype on the Apollo Repository will be turned off on 03 February 2023. Although the pilot has been fruitful for both parties, the service provider IKVA is focusing on horizon scanning products and so the recommender service can no longer be supported. We recognise the importance of recommender services in supporting research discovery and are evaluating offerings from other service providers. If you would like to offer feedback on this decision please contact us on: support@repository.cam.ac.uk