The presence of roseola virus in chromosomes triples the risk of angina
Quebec City, June 16, 2015—People whose chromosomes contain the DNA of the roseola virus are three times more likely to suffer from angina, according to a new study by researchers from the Université Laval Faculty of Medicine, the CHU de Québec Research Center-Université Laval, and the University of Washington. Details of this finding are published in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Roseola, also known as «sixth disease,» is a very common childhood infection caused by the HHV-6 virus. Symptoms include a fever and a rash that dissipates after a few days. Once the infection has cleared, however, the virus does not disappear but instead takes up residence in the cells. In a small percentage of cases, the virus's DNA gets integrated in the chromosomes, including eggs or sperm.
«When that happens, the genetic material of the virus can be transmitted just like human genes,» says the study's lead author, Louis Flamand, professor at the Université Laval Faculty of Medicine and researcher at CHU de Québec. Children are born with a copy of the HHV-6 DNA in every cell of their body. We wanted to determine whether this situation, which affects 40 to 70 million people in the world, increases the risk of developing a range of diseases.»
To find out, researchers analyzed biological samples and health information of nearly 20,000 people recruited through CARTaGENE, a project to sequence the genome of a cross-section of the province of Québec's population. The analysis showed that the HHV-6 DNA was integrated into the chromosomes of 0.6% of people tested. A cross-check with CARTaGENE medical data revealed that the prevalence of angina in this group of subjects is three times greater than in the general public.
Professor Flamand acknowledges that the nature of the link between angina and HHV-6 remains unclear. One hypothesis put forward by the researchers is that the virus affects the length of telomeres, the regions at the ends of chromosomes. By measuring telomere length in patients in their sample, researchers found that they were 24% shorter in people who were both angina sufferers and HHV-6 carriers than in non-HHV-6-carriers. «This telomere shortening may be associated with premature aging of cells lining the walls of blood vessels, and may initiate an inflammatory reaction that could lead to angina pectoris,» Dr. Flamand suggests.
Detecting integrated HHV-6 in human chromosomes is easy, notes Dr. Flamand. «We could easily track this condition at birth, as we already do with hereditary diseases, and more closely monitor people whose chromosomes contain the virus.»
In addition to lead author Louis Flamand, study authors are Dr. Annie Gravel, Isabelle Dubuc, and Dr. Guillaume Morissette of the infectious and immune diseases division of the CHU de Québec-Université de Laval Research Center, and Dr. Ruth Sedlak and Dr. Keith Jerome of the University of Washington. The study was made possible by a grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
Information:
Louis Flamand, PhD, MBA
Department of microbiology, infectious disease and immunology
Faculty of Medicine
Université Laval
418-525-4444 ext. 46164
Louis.Flamand@crchul.ulaval.ca
Source:
Jean-François Huppé
Media Relations
Université Laval
418-656-7785
Jean-Francois.Huppe@dc.ulaval.ca