首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Hepatitis D virus (HDV) is the smallest virus known to infect human. About 15 million people worldwide are infected by HDV among those 240 million infected by its helper hepatitis B virus (HBV). Viral hepatitis D is considered as one of the most severe forms of human viral hepatitis. No specific antivirals are currently available to treat HDV infection and antivirals against HBV do not ameliorate hepatitis D. Liver sodium taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide (NTCP) was recently identified as a common entry receptor for HDV and HBV in cell cultures. Here we show HDV can infect mice expressing human NTCP (hNTCP-Tg). Antibodies against critical regions of HBV envelope proteins blocked HDV infection in the hNTCP-Tg mice. The infection was acute yet HDV genome replication occurred efficiently, evident by the presence of antigenome RNA and edited RNA species specifying large delta antigen in the livers of infected mice. The resolution of HDV infection appears not dependent on adaptive immune response, but might be facilitated by innate immunity. Liver RNA-seq analyses of HDV infected hNTCP-Tg and type I interferon receptor 1 (IFNα/βR1) null hNTCP-Tg mice indicated that in addition to induction of type I IFN response, HDV infection was also associated with up-regulation of novel cellular genes that may modulate HDV infection. Our work has thus proved the concept that NTCP is a functional receptor for HDV infection in vivo and established a convenient small animal model for investigation of HDV pathogenesis and evaluation of antiviral therapeutics against the early steps of infection for this important human pathogen.  相似文献   

2.
Replication of human hepatitis delta virus: recent developments   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
In a natural setting, hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is only found in patients that are also infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV). In hepatocytes infected with these two viruses, HDV RNA genomes are assembled using the envelope proteins of HBV. Since 1986, we have known that HDV has a small single-stranded RNA genome with a unique circular conformation that is replicated using a host RNA polymerase. These and other features make HDV and its replication unique, at least among agents that infect animals. This mini-review focuses on advances gained over the last 2-3 years, together with an evaluation of HDV questions that are either unsolved or not yet solved satisfactorily.  相似文献   

3.
Assembly of hepatitis delta virus particles.   总被引:25,自引:22,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
W S Ryu  M Bayer    J Taylor 《Journal of virology》1992,66(4):2310-2315
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is a subviral satellite of hepatitis B virus (HBV). Since the RNA genome of HDV can replicate in cultured cells in the absence of HBV, it has been suggested that the only helper function of HBV is to supply HBV coat proteins in the assembly process of HDV particles. To examine the factors involved in such virion assembly, we transiently cotransfected cells with various hepadnavirus constructs and cDNAs of HDV and analyzed the particles released into the medium. We report that the HDV genomic RNA and the delta antigen can be packaged by coat proteins of either HBV or the related hepadnavirus woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV). Among the three co-carboxy-terminal coat proteins of WHV, the smallest form was sufficient to package the HDV genome; even in the absence of HDV RNA, the delta antigen could be packaged by this WHV coat protein. Also, of the two co-amino-terminal forms of the delta antigen, only the larger form was essential for packaging.  相似文献   

4.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is coated with large (L), middle (M), and small (S) envelope proteins encoded by coinfecting hepatitis B virus (HBV). To study the role of the HBV envelope proteins in the assembly and infectivity of HDV, we produced three types of recombinant particles in Huh7 cells by transfection with HBV DNA and HDV cDNA: (i) particles with an envelope containing the S HBV envelope protein only, (ii) particles with an envelope containing S and M proteins, and (iii) particles with an envelope containing S, M, and L proteins. Although the resulting S-, SM-, and SML-HDV particles contained both hepatitis delta antigen and HDV RNA, only particles coated with all three envelope proteins (SML) showed evidence of infectivity in an in vitro culture system susceptible to HDV infection. We concluded that the L HBV envelope protein, and more specifically the pre-S1 domain, is important for infectivity of HDV particles and that the M protein, which has been reported to bear a site for binding to polymerized albumin in the pre-S2 domain, is not sufficient for infectivity. Our data also show that the helper HBV is not required for initiation of HDV infection. The mechanism by which the L protein may affect HDV infectivity is discussed herein.  相似文献   

5.
《Seminars in Virology》1993,4(5):313-317
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is a subviral satellite of human hepatitis B virus (HBV). The discovery in 1977 and subsequent demonstration of HDV as an infectious agent was primarily due to the work of Rizzetto and co-workers. In nature, HDV infections occur only if HBV is present. This is because HDV is a subviral satellite of HBV; HBV provides the envelope, or surface antigens, needed for the assembly of HDV particles. Other than this dependence, HDV seems fundamentally different from HBV; it has a single-stranded RNA genome and replicates via RNA-directed RNA synthesis. Five years ago the first nucleotide sequence of the genome was obtained and as a consequence we have progressively gained a picture of the genetic organization of this unusual agent and of its replication strategy.  相似文献   

6.
This study demonstrates that the envelope proteins of hepatitis B virus (HBV) could be incorporated into the lipid membrane of lentivirus pseudotype particles. The assembly procedure was initiated by the transfection of 293T cells with three plasmids: (i) a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) packaging construct, (ii) a transfer plasmid expressing a reporter gene, and (iii) a plasmid expressing large (L), middle (M), and small (S) HBV envelope proteins. After 2 days, hepatitis B surface antigen and the antigenic forms of L, M, and S were detected at the cell surface by flow cytometry. Also, virus particles that were able to infect cultured primary human hepatocytes (PHH) were released. Under optimal conditions, 50% of PHH could be infected. In addition, the susceptibility of PHH and the resistance of other cell types to the pseudotype particles were similar to those observed for HBV and hepatitis delta virus (HDV), which shares the same L, M, and S. Furthermore, the infection of PHH by the pseudotype was sensitive to known inhibitors of HBV and HDV entry. These findings of specific and efficient infection of hepatocytes could be applicable to liver-specific gene therapy and may help clarify the attachment and entry mechanism used by HBV and HDV.  相似文献   

7.
Ribonucleoprotein complexes of hepatitis delta virus.   总被引:14,自引:13,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
W S Ryu  H J Netter  M Bayer    J Taylor 《Journal of virology》1993,67(6):3281-3287
Human hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is a subviral satellite agent of hepatitis B virus (HBV). The envelope proteins of HDV are provided by the helper virus, HBV, but very little is known about the internal structure of HDV. The particles contain multiple copies of the delta antigen and an unusual RNA genome that is small, about 1,700 nucleotides in length, single stranded, and circular. By using UV cross-linking, equilibrium density centrifugation, and immunoprecipitation, we obtained evidence consistent with the interpretation that delta antigen and genomic RNA form a stable ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex within the virion. Furthermore, electron-microscopic examination of the purified viral RNP revealed a roughly spherical core-like structure with a diameter of 18.7 +/- 2.5 nm. We also isolated HDV-specific RNP structures from the nuclei of cells undergoing HDV genome replication; both the genome and antigenome (a complement of the genome) of HDV were found to be in such complexes. From the equilibrium density analyses of the viral and nuclear RNPs, we were able to deduce the number of molecules of delta antigen per molecule of HDV RNA. For virions, this number was predominantly ca. 70, which was larger than for the nuclear RNPs, which were more heterogeneous, with an average value of ca. 30.  相似文献   

8.
J C Wu  P J Chen  M Y Kuo  S D Lee  D S Chen    L P Ting 《Journal of virology》1991,65(3):1099-1104
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is a defective virus with a coat composing of the surface antigen of its helper virus, hepatitis B virus (HBV). Replication of HDV in the absence of HBV has been shown in cell cultures by transient transfection of the HDV plasmid. However, the formation and release of HDV virions have not been observed. In this report, a human hepatoma cell line HuH-7 was transiently cotransfected with HDV and HBV plasmids. The production of monomeric and multimeric antigenomic RNAs of HDV in the transfected cells indicated replication of the HDV genome. The major 3.5- and 2.1-kb RNAs of HBV were also expressed. Virions of both HDV and HBV were released from the cotransfected cells, as shown by the detection of monomeric genomic HDV RNA and partially double-stranded HBV DNA in the culture medium. Thus, this is the first report that describes the assembly and the release of HDV viral particles in an in vitro cell culture. The HDV virions released possessed physicochemical properties identical to those of the HDV virions found in infected human serum. Furthermore, expression of both the 3.5- and 2.1-kb RNAs of HBV was shown to be dramatically decreased by the presence of HDV, indicating suppression of the expression of HBV genes by HDV. The amount of HBV virions released was similarly suppressed by HDV. Cotransfection of HBV with an expression plasmid of the HDV delta antigen remarkably reduced the levels of the 3.5- and 2.1-kb HBV RNAs, indicating that suppression of the expression of HBV RNAs by HDV occurs via the action of the delta antigen. This HBV- and HDV-cotransfected human hepatoma cell line should provide an excellent system for the study of the function of the delta antigen and the interaction between HDV and its helper, HBV.  相似文献   

9.
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) is a highly pathogenic human RNA virus whose genome is structurally related to those of plant viroids. Although its spread from cell to cell requires helper functions supplied by hepatitis B virus (HBV), intracellular HDV RNA replication can proceed in the absence of HBV proteins. As HDV encodes no RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, the identity of the (presumably cellular) enzyme responsible for this reaction remains unknown. Here we show that, in contrast to mammalian cells, avian cells do not support efficient HDV RNA replication and that this defect cannot be rescued by provision of HDV gene products in trans. Contrary to earlier assertions, this defect is not due to enhanced apoptosis triggered in avian cells by HDV. Fusion of avian cells to mammalian cells rescues HDV replication in avian nuclei, indicating that the nonpermissive phenotype of avian cells is not due to the presence of dominantly acting inhibitors of replication. Rather, avian cells lack one or more essential permissive factors present in mammalian cells. These results set the stage for the identification of such factors and also explain the failure of earlier efforts to transmit HDV infection to avian hosts harboring indigenous hepadnaviruses.  相似文献   

10.
11.
In the sera of patients infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV), in addition to infectious particles, there is an excess (typically 1,000- to 100,000-fold) of empty subviral particles (SVP) composed solely of HBV envelope proteins in the form of relatively smaller spheres and filaments of variable length. Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) assembly also uses the envelope proteins of HBV to produce an infectious particle. Rate-zonal sedimentation was used to study the particles released from liver cell lines that produced SVP only, HDV plus SVP, and HBV plus SVP. The SVP made in the absence of HBV or HDV were further examined by electron microscopy. They bound efficiently to heparin columns, consistent with an ability to bind cell surface glycosaminoglycans. However, unlike soluble forms of HBV envelope protein that were potent inhibitors, the SVP did not inhibit the ability of HBV and HDV to infect primary human hepatocytes.  相似文献   

12.
BackgroundThe sodium-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) is both a key bile acid (BA) transporter mediating uptake of BA into hepatocytes and an essential receptor for hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis D virus (HDV). In this study we aimed to characterize to what extent and through what mechanism BA affect HDV cell entry.MethodsHuH-7 cells stably expressing NTCP (HuH-7/NTCP) and primary human hepatocytes (PHH) were infected with in vitro generated HDV particles. Infectivity in the absence or presence of compounds was assessed using immunofluorescence staining for HDV antigen, standard 50% tissue culture infectious dose (TCID50) assays and quantitative PCR.ResultsAddition of primary conjugated and unconjugated BA resulted in a dose dependent reduction in the number of infected cells while secondary, tertiary and synthetic BA had a lesser effect. This effect was observed both in HuH-7/NTCP and in PHH. Other replication cycle steps such as replication and particle assembly and release were unaffected. Moreover, inhibitory BA competed with a fragment from the large HBV envelope protein for binding to NTCP-expressing cells. Conversely, the sodium/BA-cotransporter function of NTCP seemed not to be required for HDV infection since infection was similar in the presence or absence of a sodium gradient across the plasma membrane. When chenodeoxycolic acid (15 mg per kg body weight) was administered to three chronically HDV infected individuals over a period of up to 16 days there was no change in serum HDV RNA.ConclusionsPrimary BA inhibit NTCP-mediated HDV entry into hepatocytes suggesting that modulation of the BA pool may affect HDV infection of hepatocytes.  相似文献   

13.
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) particles were produced in Huh7 human hepatoma cells by transfection with cloned hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA and HDV cDNA. The particles were characterized by their buoyant density, the presence of encapsidated viral RNA, and their ability to infect primary cultures of chimpanzee hepatocytes. Successful infection was evidenced by the appearance of increasing amounts of intracellular HDV RNA after exposure to particles. Infection was prevented when particles were incubated with antibodies directed against synthetic peptides specific for epitopes of the pre-S1 or pre-S2 domains of the HBV envelope proteins before exposure to hepatocytes. These data demonstrate that HDV particles produced in vitro are infectious and indicate (i) that infectious particles are coated with HBV envelope proteins that contain the pre-S1 and pre-S2 regions, (ii) that epitopes of the pre-S1 and pre-S2 domains of HBV envelope proteins are exposed at the surface of HDV particles, and (iii) that antibodies directed against those epitopes have neutralizing activity against HDV.  相似文献   

14.
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection and spread in vivo are dependent upon coinfection by hepatitis B virus (HBV), and dual HDV/HBV infection is frequently more severe than HBV infection alone, raising the possibility that HDV infection may be deleterious to cells. Here we have examined the effects of HDV replication on the long-term growth of cultured cells. Our results show that most cells transfected with HDV cDNA do not give rise to stable cell lines expressing viral antigens or replicative intermediates; in addition, cotransfection of HDV replicons with a plasmid vector expressing a hygromycin resistance marker results in a dose-dependent impairment of hygromycin-resistant colony formation. When cells transfected with replication-competent HDV cDNA are followed prospectively, a progressive decline in viral RNA replication and a steady decrease in the proportion of cells expressing delta antigen are observed. However, in transient transfection assays, no evidence was found to link HDV replication to apoptosis or to cell cycle arrest, nor did HDV replication confer on host cells enhanced sensitivity to inducers of apoptosis. Thus, HDV replication does not appear to be acutely cytotoxic. However, in dividing cells HDV replication is associated with a subtler growth disadvantage, leading to selection in culture for cells displaying diminished HDV expression. This effect would not be expected to cause hepatitis in vivo but might contribute to impaired liver regeneration in the setting of ongoing hepatocellular injury.  相似文献   

15.
Blanchet M  Sureau C 《Journal of virology》2006,80(24):11935-11945
The hepatitis B virus (HBV) envelope proteins have the ability to assemble three types of viral particles, (i) the empty subviral particles (SVPs), (ii) the mature HBV virions, and (iii) the hepatitis delta virus (HDV) particles, in cells that are coinfected with HBV and HDV. To gain insight into the function of the HBV envelope proteins in morphogenesis of HBV or HDV virions, we have investigated subdomains of the envelope proteins that have been shown or predicted to lie at the cytosolic face of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane during synthesis, a position prone to interaction with the inner core structure. These domains, referred to here as cytosolic loops I and II (CYL-I and -II, respectively), were subjected to mutagenesis. The mutations were introduced in the three HBV envelope proteins, designated small, middle, and large (S-HBsAg, M-HBsAg, and L-HBsAg, respectively). The mutants were expressed in HuH-7 cells to evaluate their capacity for self-assembly and formation of HBV or HDV virions when HBV nucleocapsid or HDV ribonucleoprotein, respectively, was provided. We found that SVP-competent CYL-I mutations between positions 23 and 78 of the S domain were permissive to HBV or HDV virion assembly. One mutation (P29A) was permissive for synthesis of the S- and M-HBsAg but adversely affected the synthesis or stability of L-HBsAg, thereby preventing the assembly of HBV virions. Furthermore, using an in vitro infection assay based on the HepaRG cells and the HDV model, we have shown that particles coated with envelope proteins bearing CYL-I mutations were fully infectious, hence indicating the absence of an infectivity determinant in this region. Finally, we demonstrated that the tryptophan residues at positions 196, 199, and 201 in CYL-II, which were shown to exert a matrix function for assembly of HDV particles (I. Komla-Soukha and C. Sureau, J. Virol. 80:4648-4655, 2006), were dispensable for both assembly and infectivity of HBV virions.  相似文献   

16.
Gudima S  He Y  Chai N  Bruss V  Urban S  Mason W  Taylor J 《Journal of virology》2008,82(15):7276-7283
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis delta virus (HDV) share the HBV envelope proteins. When woodchucks chronically infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) are superinfected with HDV, they produce HDV with a WHV envelope, wHDV. Several lines of evidence are provided that wHDV infects not only cultured primary woodchuck hepatocytes (PWH) but also primary human hepatocytes (PHH). Surprisingly, HBV-enveloped HDV (hHDV) and wHDV infected PHH with comparable efficiencies; however, hHDV did not infect PWH. The basis for these host range specificities was investigated using as inhibitors peptides bearing species-specific pre-S (where S is the small envelope protein) sequences. It was found that pre-S1 contributed to the ability of wHDV to infect both PHH and PWH. In addition, the inability of hHDV to infect PWH was not overcome using a chimeric form of hHDV containing WHV S protein, again supporting the essential role of pre-S1 in infection of target cells. One interpretation of these data is that host range specificity of HDV is determined entirely by pre-S1 and that the WHV and HBV pre-S1 proteins recognize different receptors on PHH.  相似文献   

17.
18.
V Bichko  H J Netter    J Taylor 《Journal of virology》1994,68(8):5247-5252
Cationic liposomes are known to facilitate efficient transfection of animal cells with DNA and even some viruses. As reported here, we have been able to use such a commercially available formulation (Lipofectamine) and introduce human hepatitis delta virus (HDV) into lines of cultured cells and demonstrate replication of the HDV genome both by immunofluorescence and by Northern (RNA) analysis. As much as 10% of the human hepatoma cell line Huh7 was transfected with HDV. Also transfected were the baby hamster kidney cell line BHK-21 and the Morris rat hepatoma line 7777. Two initial applications of HDV transfection have been made. (i) The ribonucleoprotein structure of HDV was isolated from disrupted virions and demonstrated as being sufficient to transfect Huh7 cells. In contrast, naked HDV RNA was not sufficient. (ii) From a study of cells transfected with HDV particles, it was found that, even after as long as 7 weeks and the associated replication of the transfected cells, the HDV RNA genome was still replicating. Apparently, HDV, in the absence of helper virus and in the absence of virus assembly, can maintain persistent replication and expression of the HDV genome. Transfection was also achieved with woodchuck hepatitis virus introduced into Huh7 cells. In summary, this transfection procedure should be of use for the study of these and maybe other recalcitrant animal viruses.  相似文献   

19.
M Y Kuo  M Chao    J Taylor 《Journal of virology》1989,63(5):1945-1950
Beginning with three partial cDNA clones of the RNA genome of human hepatitis delta virus (HDV), we assembled the complete 1,679-base sequence on a single molecule and then inserted a trimer of this into plasmid pSLV, a simian virus 40-based eucaryotic expression vector. This construct was used to transfect both monkey kidney (COS7) and human hepatocellular carcinoma (HuH7) cell lines. In this way we obtained replication of the HDV RNA genome and the appearance, in the nucleoli, of the delta antigen, the only known virus-coded protein. This proved both that the HDV genome could replicate in nonliver as well as liver cells and that there was no requirement for the presence of hepatitis B virus sequences or proteins. When the pSVL construct was made with a dimer of an HDV sequence with a 2-base-pair deletion in the open reading frame, genome replication was reduced at least 40-fold. However, when we cotransfected with a plasmid that expressed the correct delta antigen, the mutated dimer achieved a level of genome replication comparable to that of the nonmutated sequence. We thus conclude that the delta antigen can act in trans and is essential for replication of the HDV genome.  相似文献   

20.
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection of human hepatocytes infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) is associated with increased liver damage and risk of fulminant disease. Although considerable progress has been made towards the elucidation of the mechanisms of HDV replication and pathogenesis, little is still known about the host factors involved in the different steps of the replication cycle. Here, we made use of a proteomic approach to analyse the global alterations in protein expression that arise in human hepatocytes separately transfected with each of the HDV components. Huh7 cells were transiently transfected with plasmids that code for the small delta antigen (S-HDAg), large delta antigen (L-HDAg), genomic RNA (gRNA), and antigenomic RNA (agRNA), respectively. Total protein extracts were separated by 2-DE and differentially expressed spots were identified by MALDI-TOF followed by database searching. We identified 32 proteins known to be involved in different pathways namely nucleic acid metabolism, protein metabolism, transport, signal transduction, apoptosis, and cell growth. Moreover, the down regulation of hnRNP D, HSP105, and triosephosphate isomerase was further confirmed by Real time PCR.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号