HTLV-III Infection in Brains of Children and Adults with AIDS Encephalopathy

George M. Shaw(National Cancer Institute), Mary‐Ellen Harper(National Cancer Institute), Beatrice H. Hahn(National Cancer Institute), Leon G. Epstein(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), D. Carleton Gajdusek(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), Richard W. Price(Cornell University), Bradford Navia(Cornell University), Carol K. Petito(Cornell University), Carl O’Hara(Deaconess Hospital), Jerome E. Groopman(Deaconess Hospital), Eun-Sook Cho(University Hospital, Newark), James M. Oleske(University Hospital, Newark), Flossie Wong‐Staal(National Cancer Institute), Robert C. Gallo(National Cancer Institute)
Science
January 11, 1985
Cited by 904

Abstract

Unexplained debilitating dementia or encephalopathy occurs frequently in adults and children with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Brains from 15 individuals with AIDS and encephalopathy were examined by Southern analysis and in situ hybridization for the presence of human T-cell leukemia (lymphotropic) virus type III (HTLV-III), the virus believed to be the causative agent of AIDS. HTLV-III DNA was detected in the brains of five patients, and viral-specific RNA was detected in four of these. In view of these findings and the recent demonstration of morphologic and genetic relatedness between HTLV-III and visna virus, a lentivirus that causes a chronic degenerative neurologic disease in sheep, HTLV-III should be evaluated further as a possible cause of AIDS encephalopathy.


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