By
Liz Highleyman
Chronic fatigue syndrome,
is characterized by a variety of symptoms including debilitating
exhaustion and chronic pain. Its cause is poorly understood
-- it has been attributed to everything from to chemical
sensitivities to chronic Lyme disease to psychosomatic illness
-- though it is increasingly recognized as being associated
with immune dysfunction. Many patients have been frustrated
by the lack of a clear cause or definitive treatment, and
the suggestion that it's "all in their head."
In
the present study, Vincent Lombardi and colleagues examined
peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) -- immune cells
such as T-cells and B-cells -- from about 100 patients with
CFS and 200 healthy control subjects. They found that cells
from 68 of 101 CFS patients (67%) harbored DNA from XMVR,
compared with just 8 of 218 unaffected individuals (3.7%).
The
researchers further determined in cell culture experiments
that XMRV derived from patients' cells was infectious, and
could be transmitted through both cell-associated and cell-free
transmission methods. They observed secondary XMRV infections
in initially uninfected lymphocytes from healthy subjects
after exposure to activated T-cells, B-cells, or plasma
from CFS patients.
XMRV
is classified as a human gammaretrovirus. Like HIV (a lentivirus),
it is part of the same broad family of family of retroviruses
-- viruses that use the reverse transcriptase enzyme to
convert their genetic material from RNA to DNA -- but it
is more closely related to a group of viruses that cause
cancers such as leukemia. Another
recent study linked XMRV to prostate cancer.
In
conclusion, the study authors wrote, "These findings
raise the possibility that XMRV may be a contributing factor
in the pathogenesis of CFS." The results also help
explain the observed tendency of chronic fatigue to affect
multiple members of social networks.
If
further studies confirm that this is the case -- which would
be a paradigm shift similar to the discovery that bacteria,
not psychological stress, is the primary cause of gastric
ulcers -- antiretroviral agents (though not necessarily
those now used against HIV) may some day play a role in
CFS treatment.
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RA
Weiss. The discovery of endogenous retroviruses.
Retrovirology. 3:67. October 3, 2006
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Whittemore Peterson Institute, Reno, NV; Laboratory of
Experimental Immunology, National Cancer Institute-Frederick,
Frederick, MD; Department of Cancer Biology, Lerner Research
Institute, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH; Laboratory
of Cancer Prevention, National Cancer Institute-Frederick,
Frederick, MD; Advanced Technology Program, National Cancer
Institute-Frederick, Frederick, MD' Basic Research Program,
Scientific Applications International Corporation, National
Cancer Institute-Frederick, Frederick, MD.

10/13/09
Reference
V
Lombardi, FW Ruscetti, J Das Gupta, and others. Detection
of an Infectious Retrovirus, XMRV, in Blood Cells of Patients
with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Science. October 8, 2009
(epub ahead of print). (Abstract).
Other
source
K
Harmon. Retrovirus
Linked to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Could Aid in Diagnosis.
Scientific American online. October 18, 2009.
B
Ham (AAAS). Science:
Retrovirus Detected In Patients With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome-But
Does It Cause the Disease? News release. October
8, 2009.