Evidence against a role for
SV40 infection in human mesotheliomas and high risk of false-positive
PCR results owing to presence of SV40 sequences in common laboratory
plasmids
Evidence against a role for SV40 infection in human
mesotheliomas and high risk of false-positive PCR results owing to
presence of SV40 sequences in common laboratory plasmids
Lopez-Rios F, Illei PB, Rusch V, Ladanyi M. Department of
Pathology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Avenue, New
York, NY 10021, USA.
BACKGROUND: PCR-based evidence of infection by simian virus 40
(SV40) has been reported in varying proportions of pleural mesotheliomas
and other tumours, but data are conflicting and reproducibility
limited. During a study of SV40 in relation to homozygous deletion of
CDKN2A in mesotheliomas, we became concerned by inconsistent results and
therefore used several independent techniques to investigate SV40 in
these tumours.
METHODS: High-quality DNA and RNA were extracted from 71
frozen mesothelioma samples. DNA PCR was done with four sets of primers
for the SV40 T-antigen gene. RNA transcripts were examined by RT-PCR.
FINDINGS: The first two primer sets for DNA PCR gave positive results in
proportions similar to those reported in positive studies (56-62%) but
there were unusual reproducibility difficulties. These primers were in a
region of the T-antigen gene (nucleotides 4100-4713) that is present in
many common laboratory plasmids. In assays with PCR primers not
included within that region, only four cases (6%) showed products but
these were too faint to suggest clonal infection. Further PCR assays
confirmed that the SV40 sequences in the tumour samples had a deletion
found only in plasmids, not in native functional SV40. Review of
previous studies showed a similar pattern of discrepancies between SV40
T-antigen DNA PCR results obtained with primers within and beyond the
region 4100-4713. All 71 mesotheliomas were negative for T-antigen
transcripts by RT-PCR, and lacked T-antigen-positive tumour cells by
immunohistochemistry.
INTERPRETATION: Our data based on three independent
experimental approaches do not support a significant role for SV40 in
human mesotheliomas. The risk of false-positive results due to
contamination by common laboratory plasmids containing SV40 sequences
has been underestimated. Studies of SV40 based on PCR methods require
careful primer design to reduce this risk.
RELEVANCE TO PRACTICE: This paper presents several lines of
evidence against the proposed link between SV40 infection and human
mesotheliomas. Studies reporting a high prevalence of SV40 DNA in human
tumours have been based on molecular assays prone to false-positive
results. Because SV40 appears unlikely to have a major role, if any, in
human mesotheliomas, clinicians should continue to consider asbestos
exposure as the most likely and most thoroughly established aetiological
factor in individuals with this cancer.
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