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Production of Infectious Genotype 1b Virus Particles in Cell Culture and Impairment by Replication Enhancing Mutations

With the advent of subgenomic hepatitis C virus (HCV) replicons, studies of the intracellular steps of the viral replication cycle became possible. These RNAs are capable of self-amplification in cultured human hepatoma cells, but save for the genotype 2a isolate JFH-1, efficient replication of thes...

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Autores principales: Pietschmann, Thomas, Zayas, Margarita, Meuleman, Philip, Long, Gang, Appel, Nicole, Koutsoudakis, George, Kallis, Stephanie, Leroux-Roels, Geert, Lohmann, Volker, Bartenschlager, Ralf
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2691593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19521536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000475
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author Pietschmann, Thomas
Zayas, Margarita
Meuleman, Philip
Long, Gang
Appel, Nicole
Koutsoudakis, George
Kallis, Stephanie
Leroux-Roels, Geert
Lohmann, Volker
Bartenschlager, Ralf
author_facet Pietschmann, Thomas
Zayas, Margarita
Meuleman, Philip
Long, Gang
Appel, Nicole
Koutsoudakis, George
Kallis, Stephanie
Leroux-Roels, Geert
Lohmann, Volker
Bartenschlager, Ralf
author_sort Pietschmann, Thomas
collection PubMed
description With the advent of subgenomic hepatitis C virus (HCV) replicons, studies of the intracellular steps of the viral replication cycle became possible. These RNAs are capable of self-amplification in cultured human hepatoma cells, but save for the genotype 2a isolate JFH-1, efficient replication of these HCV RNAs requires replication enhancing mutations (REMs), previously also called cell culture adaptive mutations. These mutations cluster primarily in the central region of non-structural protein 5A (NS5A), but may also reside in the NS3 helicase domain or at a distinct position in NS4B. Most efficient replication has been achieved by combining REMs residing in NS3 with distinct REMs located in NS4B or NS5A. However, in spite of efficient replication of HCV genomes containing such mutations, they do not support production of infectious virus particles. By using the genotype 1b isolate Con1, in this study we show that REMs interfere with HCV assembly. Strongest impairment of virus formation was found with REMs located in the NS3 helicase (E1202G and T1280I) as well as NS5A (S2204R), whereas a highly adaptive REM in NS4B still allowed virus production although relative levels of core release were also reduced. We also show that cells transfected with the Con1 wild type genome or the genome containing the REM in NS4B release HCV particles that are infectious both in cell culture and in vivo. Our data provide an explanation for the in vitro and in vivo attenuation of cell culture adapted HCV genomes and may open new avenues for the development of fully competent culture systems covering the therapeutically most relevant HCV genotypes.
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spelling pubmed-26915932009-06-12 Production of Infectious Genotype 1b Virus Particles in Cell Culture and Impairment by Replication Enhancing Mutations Pietschmann, Thomas Zayas, Margarita Meuleman, Philip Long, Gang Appel, Nicole Koutsoudakis, George Kallis, Stephanie Leroux-Roels, Geert Lohmann, Volker Bartenschlager, Ralf PLoS Pathog Research Article With the advent of subgenomic hepatitis C virus (HCV) replicons, studies of the intracellular steps of the viral replication cycle became possible. These RNAs are capable of self-amplification in cultured human hepatoma cells, but save for the genotype 2a isolate JFH-1, efficient replication of these HCV RNAs requires replication enhancing mutations (REMs), previously also called cell culture adaptive mutations. These mutations cluster primarily in the central region of non-structural protein 5A (NS5A), but may also reside in the NS3 helicase domain or at a distinct position in NS4B. Most efficient replication has been achieved by combining REMs residing in NS3 with distinct REMs located in NS4B or NS5A. However, in spite of efficient replication of HCV genomes containing such mutations, they do not support production of infectious virus particles. By using the genotype 1b isolate Con1, in this study we show that REMs interfere with HCV assembly. Strongest impairment of virus formation was found with REMs located in the NS3 helicase (E1202G and T1280I) as well as NS5A (S2204R), whereas a highly adaptive REM in NS4B still allowed virus production although relative levels of core release were also reduced. We also show that cells transfected with the Con1 wild type genome or the genome containing the REM in NS4B release HCV particles that are infectious both in cell culture and in vivo. Our data provide an explanation for the in vitro and in vivo attenuation of cell culture adapted HCV genomes and may open new avenues for the development of fully competent culture systems covering the therapeutically most relevant HCV genotypes. Public Library of Science 2009-06-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2691593/ /pubmed/19521536 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000475 Text en Pietschmann et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pietschmann, Thomas
Zayas, Margarita
Meuleman, Philip
Long, Gang
Appel, Nicole
Koutsoudakis, George
Kallis, Stephanie
Leroux-Roels, Geert
Lohmann, Volker
Bartenschlager, Ralf
Production of Infectious Genotype 1b Virus Particles in Cell Culture and Impairment by Replication Enhancing Mutations
title Production of Infectious Genotype 1b Virus Particles in Cell Culture and Impairment by Replication Enhancing Mutations
title_full Production of Infectious Genotype 1b Virus Particles in Cell Culture and Impairment by Replication Enhancing Mutations
title_fullStr Production of Infectious Genotype 1b Virus Particles in Cell Culture and Impairment by Replication Enhancing Mutations
title_full_unstemmed Production of Infectious Genotype 1b Virus Particles in Cell Culture and Impairment by Replication Enhancing Mutations
title_short Production of Infectious Genotype 1b Virus Particles in Cell Culture and Impairment by Replication Enhancing Mutations
title_sort production of infectious genotype 1b virus particles in cell culture and impairment by replication enhancing mutations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2691593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19521536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000475
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