Applied BioPhysics Foundation

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Presentation at the CDC March 2002 - Part 1

 Abstract

Stealth-adaptation is a mechanism that allows cytopathic viruses to evade immune elimination through the deletion of genes coding the major antigens targeted by the cellular immune system. A prototype stealth-adapted virus, repeatedly cultured from a patient with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) was cloned and partially sequenced. It has a fragmented, genetically unstable, genome. It has retained numerous viral sequences that can be aligned to various regions of the genome of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV).

Where the comparison can be made, the sequences match much more closely to those of African green monkey simian cytomegalovirus (SCMV) indicating an unequivocal origin from SCMV. Kidney cells from cytomegalovirus seropositive African green monkeys were, until recently, routinely used to produce live poliovirus vaccine. The SCMV-derived stealth-adapted virus has five adjacent, but divergent, open reading frames that potentially code for molecules related to the US28 CC chemokine receptor protein of HCMV.

In addition, the virus has acquired cellular sequences from infected cells, including a set of three divergent genes that potentially code for proteins related to the putative oncogenic CXC chemokine known as melanoma growth stimulatory activity (MGSA/Gro-alpha). The genes in the prototype SCMV-derived stealth-adapted virus, supports current experimental therapeutic approaches based on chemokine suppression. Interestingly, the MGSA-related genes generally lack introns and were, therefore, presumably assimilated into viral DNA from cellular RNA through reverse transcription. The virus has also acquired genetic sequences from various bacteria. This finding has led to the secondary designation of this type of novel microorganism as viteria.

Molecularly heterogeneous viruses, inducing similar cytopathic effects in culture (and when examined, non-inflammatory vacuolating cellular damage in brain and tissue biopsies), have been cultured from numerous patients with severe neurological, psychiatric, immunological and neoplastic diseases. In controlled, blinded, studies, cytopathic effects were recorded in 9% of healthy individuals donating blood for transfusion; in contrast to the positive results recorded in virtually all blood samples from patients with various illnesses. The differing clinical manifestations in infected patients may reflect the assimilation of different cellular and other sequences in various stealth-adapted viruses. Stealth–adapted viruses (and viteria) pose a major threat to Public Health.

Further information is available on the internet at www.ccid.org.

Background Information

A. There is an increasing incidence of diseases with accompanying signs and symptoms of brain damage. These include neurological and psychiatric illnesses, childhood behavioral disorders, and such common conditions as chronic fatigue, Gulf War Syndrome, so-called "chronic Lyme disease", and many cancers. Altogether, these diseases have an enormous social impact.

B. An infectious cause of many of these chronic illnesses has not been considered primarily because there is no inflammation in the involved tissues.

C. Brain biopsies do, however, show cells with damaged mitochondria, lipid vacuoles, and irregular inclusions. Examples are shown in the figures 1-5.

D. Viral cultures from patients with neuropsychiatric and other illnesses, regularly develop clusters of foamy vacuolated cells. These cellular changes are consistent with infection by actively cytopathic viruses. Figures 6-7.

E. The cultures are also remarkable in the production of large quantities of lipids, including cholesterol esters, and pigmented, protease-resistant, aggregates and ribbon-shaped materials, some of which incorporate metals. Figures 8-15.

F. Viral cultures can induce severe, non-inflammatory, widespread illness when inoculated into cats. The cytopathic effect (CPE) seen in tissues of infected animals is comparable to that seen in the tissue cultures.

G. While the viruses causing CPE in viral cultures differ in different patients, one viral isolate was unequivocally derived from an African green monkey simian cytomegalovirus (SCMV). The issue of probable SCMV contamination of live polio virus vaccines produced in kidney cells of African green monkeys was identified by Industry and FDA in 1972. Unfortunately, this potential problem with live polio virus vaccines was not publicly disclosed, nor scientifically addressed.

H. Continued sequencing of DNA isolated from this cultured virus shows intriguing genetic modifications. Apparent loss of critical viral genes can explain how the virus evades the cellular immune system. Sequencing also reveals the surprizing presence of an assortment of bacterial genes, including genes very closely related to those of Brucella, Mycoplasma, Streptococcus, and other bacterial species. This finding shows the capacity of such viruses to pass, and possibly, to have been passed, through bacteria. Stealth viruses can also potentially incorporate cancer causing cellular genes, as shown by the presence of a cancer-related chemokine gene in the SCMV-derived stealth-adapted virus.

 


 

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