Specific Detection of Serum Antibodies against BKPyV, A Small DNA Tumour Virus, in Patients Affected by Choroidal Nevi
- PMID: 29109715
- PMCID: PMC5660439
- DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.02059
Specific Detection of Serum Antibodies against BKPyV, A Small DNA Tumour Virus, in Patients Affected by Choroidal Nevi
Abstract
Ocular or choroidal nevus (CN) is a rare benign neoplastic lesion of the eye. The cause of CN onset/progression, which arises from the transformation of ocular melanocytes, is not known. A fraction of CN patients may develop uveal melanoma. The objective of this study was to investigate the association between CN and BK polyomavirus (BKPyV), a small DNA tumor virus. Serum IgG antibodies which react with BKPyV antigens were analyzed. An indirect E.L.I.S.A. using synthetic peptides that mimic BKPyV antigens was employed. Serum antibodies against BKPyV were also investigated by haemagglutination inhibition (HAI) assay. Sera were from CN patients and healthy subject (HS) were the control. A statistically significant higher prevalence of antibodies against BKPyV capsid protein antigens in serum samples from CN patients was detected, compared to HS, using two independent techniques, indirect E.L.I.S.A. and HAI (87.3% CN vs. 62.1% HS and 91.5% CN vs. 64.4% HS, respectively; p < 0.005). Our data suggest an association exists between CN and BKPyV indicating that this small DNA tumor virus could be responsible in the onset of this benign neoplastic lesion affecting eye melanocytes. This investigation reports the association between choroidal nevi and BKPyV infection for the first time. These data are innovative in this field and may represent a starting point for further investigation into the putative role of BKPyV in CN onset/progression.
Keywords: BKPyV; antibody; choroidal nevus; prevalence; serum; titer.
Figures

References
-
- Barbanti-Brodano G., Martini F., De Mattei M., Lazzarin L., Corallini A., Tognon M. (1998). BK and JC human polyomaviruses and simian virus 40: natural history of infection in humans, experimental oncogenicity, and association with human tumors. Adv. Virus Res. 50, 69–99. - PubMed
-
- Barbanti-Brodano G., Sabbioni S., Martini F., Negrini M., Corallini A., Tognon M. (2004). Simian virus 40 infection in humans and association with human diseases: results and hypotheses. Virology 318, 1–9. - PubMed
-
- Becker J. C., Butel J. S., Bejarano M. T., Coursaget P., Rochford R., Troye-Blomberg M., et al. (2013). WHO international agency for research on cancer monograph working group. malaria and of some polyomaviruses (SV40, BK, JC, and merkel cell viruses). IARC Monogr. 104, 215–257.
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources