Passenger virus

A passenger virus is a virus that is frequently found in samples from diseased tissue, such as tumours, but does not contribute to causing the disease.

Experimental demonstration of passenger status

Proving that a virus has no causative role can be difficult. Although none of the following signs is definitive, evidence that a virus found in diseased tissue is a passenger rather than a causative agent includes:

Examples

A well-established example is lactate dehydrogenase virus, which is often found in mouse tumours.[1] Hepatitis G virus and Chandipura virus are possible examples in humans.[2][3] The Duesberg hypothesis posits that HIV is a passenger virus in the etiology of AIDS.[4]

References

  1. ^ Mongini PK, Rosenberg LT. (1976) Inhibition of lymphocyte trapping by a passenger virus in murine ascitic tumors: characterization of lactic dehydrogenase virus (LDV) as the inhibitory component and analysis of the mechanism of inhibition. J Exp Med 143: 100–113 (PMID 1244415) (full text)
  2. ^ Mphahlele MJ, Lau GK, Carman WF. (1998) HGV: the identification, biology and prevalence of an orphan virus. Liver 18: 143–155 (PMID 9716223)
  3. ^ Potharaju NR, Potharaju AK (2006) Is Chandipura virus an emerging human pathogen? Arch Dis Child 91: 279–280 (PMID 16492900) (full text)
  4. ^ Duesberg P, Rasnick D. (1998) The AIDS dilemma: drug diseases blamed on a passenger virus. Genetica 104: 85–132 (doi:10.1023/A:1003405220186 PMID 10220905)