4.4 Article

Cell culture and in vivo analyses of cytopathic hepatitis C virus mutants

Journal

VIROLOGY
Volume 405, Issue 2, Pages 361-369

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2010.06.020

Keywords

HCV-JFH1 cell culture; Plaque assay; Cytopathic effect; Adaptive mutations; Human hepatocyte chimeric mice

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology-Japan
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare-Japan
  3. Japan Health Sciences Foundation
  4. National Institute of Biomedical Innovation

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HCV-JFH1 yields subclones that develop cytopathic plaques (Sekine-Osajima Y, et al., Virology 2008; 371:71). Here, we investigated viral amino acid substitutions in cytopathic mutant HCV-JFH1 clones and their characteristics in vitro and in vivo. The mutant viruses with individual C2441S, P29385 or R2985P signature substitutions, and with all three substitutions, showed significantly higher intracellular replication efficiencies and greater cytopathic effects than the parental JFH1 in vitro. The mutant HCV-inoculated mice showed significantly higher serum HCV RNA and higher level of expression of ER stress-related proteins in early period of infection. At 8 weeks post inoculation, these signature mutations had reverted to the wild type sequences. HCV-induced cytopathogenicity is associated with the level of intracellular viral replication and is determined by certain amino acid substitutions in HCV-NS5A and NS5B regions. The cytopathic HCV clones exhibit high replication competence in vivo but may be eliminated during the early stages of infection. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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