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Pathogenesis, MicroRNA‐122 Gene‐Regulation, and Protective Immune Responses After Acute Equine Hepacivirus Infection

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Equine hepacivirus (EqHV) is phylogenetically the closest relative of HCV and shares genome organization, hepatotropism, transient or persistent infection outcome, and the ability to cause hepatitis. Thus, EqHV studies are important to understand equine liver disease and further...

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Autores principales: Tomlinson, Joy E., Wolfisberg, Raphael, Fahnøe, Ulrik, Patel, Roosheel S., Trivedi, Sheetal, Kumar, Arvind, Sharma, Himanshu, Nielsen, Louise, McDonough, Sean P., Bukh, Jens, Tennant, Bud C., Kapoor, Amit, Rosenberg, Brad R., Rice, Charles M., Divers, Thomas J., Van de Walle, Gerlinde R., Scheel, Troels K.H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8435542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33713356
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hep.31802
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author Tomlinson, Joy E.
Wolfisberg, Raphael
Fahnøe, Ulrik
Patel, Roosheel S.
Trivedi, Sheetal
Kumar, Arvind
Sharma, Himanshu
Nielsen, Louise
McDonough, Sean P.
Bukh, Jens
Tennant, Bud C.
Kapoor, Amit
Rosenberg, Brad R.
Rice, Charles M.
Divers, Thomas J.
Van de Walle, Gerlinde R.
Scheel, Troels K.H.
author_facet Tomlinson, Joy E.
Wolfisberg, Raphael
Fahnøe, Ulrik
Patel, Roosheel S.
Trivedi, Sheetal
Kumar, Arvind
Sharma, Himanshu
Nielsen, Louise
McDonough, Sean P.
Bukh, Jens
Tennant, Bud C.
Kapoor, Amit
Rosenberg, Brad R.
Rice, Charles M.
Divers, Thomas J.
Van de Walle, Gerlinde R.
Scheel, Troels K.H.
author_sort Tomlinson, Joy E.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Equine hepacivirus (EqHV) is phylogenetically the closest relative of HCV and shares genome organization, hepatotropism, transient or persistent infection outcome, and the ability to cause hepatitis. Thus, EqHV studies are important to understand equine liver disease and further as an outbred surrogate animal model for HCV pathogenesis and protective immune responses. Here, we aimed to characterize the course of EqHV infection and associated protective immune responses. APPROACH AND RESULTS: Seven horses were experimentally inoculated with EqHV, monitored for 6 months, and rechallenged with the same and, subsequently, a heterologous EqHV. Clearance was the primary outcome (6 of 7) and was associated with subclinical hepatitis characterized by lymphocytic infiltrate and individual hepatocyte necrosis. Seroconversion was delayed and antibody titers waned slowly. Clearance of primary infection conferred nonsterilizing immunity, resulting in shortened duration of viremia after rechallenge. Peripheral blood mononuclear cell responses in horses were minimal, although EqHV‐specific T cells were identified. Additionally, an interferon‐stimulated gene signature was detected in the liver during EqHV infection, similar to acute HCV in humans. EqHV, as HCV, is stimulated by direct binding of the liver‐specific microRNA (miR), miR‐122. Interestingly, we found that EqHV infection sequesters enough miR‐122 to functionally affect gene regulation in the liver. This RNA‐based mechanism thus could have consequences for pathology. CONCLUSIONS: EqHV infection in horses typically has an acute resolving course, and the protective immune response lasts for at least a year and broadly attenuates subsequent infections. This could have important implications to achieve the primary goal of an HCV vaccine; to prevent chronicity while accepting acute resolving infection after virus exposure.
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spelling pubmed-84355422021-10-21 Pathogenesis, MicroRNA‐122 Gene‐Regulation, and Protective Immune Responses After Acute Equine Hepacivirus Infection Tomlinson, Joy E. Wolfisberg, Raphael Fahnøe, Ulrik Patel, Roosheel S. Trivedi, Sheetal Kumar, Arvind Sharma, Himanshu Nielsen, Louise McDonough, Sean P. Bukh, Jens Tennant, Bud C. Kapoor, Amit Rosenberg, Brad R. Rice, Charles M. Divers, Thomas J. Van de Walle, Gerlinde R. Scheel, Troels K.H. Hepatology Original Articles BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Equine hepacivirus (EqHV) is phylogenetically the closest relative of HCV and shares genome organization, hepatotropism, transient or persistent infection outcome, and the ability to cause hepatitis. Thus, EqHV studies are important to understand equine liver disease and further as an outbred surrogate animal model for HCV pathogenesis and protective immune responses. Here, we aimed to characterize the course of EqHV infection and associated protective immune responses. APPROACH AND RESULTS: Seven horses were experimentally inoculated with EqHV, monitored for 6 months, and rechallenged with the same and, subsequently, a heterologous EqHV. Clearance was the primary outcome (6 of 7) and was associated with subclinical hepatitis characterized by lymphocytic infiltrate and individual hepatocyte necrosis. Seroconversion was delayed and antibody titers waned slowly. Clearance of primary infection conferred nonsterilizing immunity, resulting in shortened duration of viremia after rechallenge. Peripheral blood mononuclear cell responses in horses were minimal, although EqHV‐specific T cells were identified. Additionally, an interferon‐stimulated gene signature was detected in the liver during EqHV infection, similar to acute HCV in humans. EqHV, as HCV, is stimulated by direct binding of the liver‐specific microRNA (miR), miR‐122. Interestingly, we found that EqHV infection sequesters enough miR‐122 to functionally affect gene regulation in the liver. This RNA‐based mechanism thus could have consequences for pathology. CONCLUSIONS: EqHV infection in horses typically has an acute resolving course, and the protective immune response lasts for at least a year and broadly attenuates subsequent infections. This could have important implications to achieve the primary goal of an HCV vaccine; to prevent chronicity while accepting acute resolving infection after virus exposure. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-06-11 2021-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8435542/ /pubmed/33713356 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hep.31802 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Hepatology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Tomlinson, Joy E.
Wolfisberg, Raphael
Fahnøe, Ulrik
Patel, Roosheel S.
Trivedi, Sheetal
Kumar, Arvind
Sharma, Himanshu
Nielsen, Louise
McDonough, Sean P.
Bukh, Jens
Tennant, Bud C.
Kapoor, Amit
Rosenberg, Brad R.
Rice, Charles M.
Divers, Thomas J.
Van de Walle, Gerlinde R.
Scheel, Troels K.H.
Pathogenesis, MicroRNA‐122 Gene‐Regulation, and Protective Immune Responses After Acute Equine Hepacivirus Infection
title Pathogenesis, MicroRNA‐122 Gene‐Regulation, and Protective Immune Responses After Acute Equine Hepacivirus Infection
title_full Pathogenesis, MicroRNA‐122 Gene‐Regulation, and Protective Immune Responses After Acute Equine Hepacivirus Infection
title_fullStr Pathogenesis, MicroRNA‐122 Gene‐Regulation, and Protective Immune Responses After Acute Equine Hepacivirus Infection
title_full_unstemmed Pathogenesis, MicroRNA‐122 Gene‐Regulation, and Protective Immune Responses After Acute Equine Hepacivirus Infection
title_short Pathogenesis, MicroRNA‐122 Gene‐Regulation, and Protective Immune Responses After Acute Equine Hepacivirus Infection
title_sort pathogenesis, microrna‐122 gene‐regulation, and protective immune responses after acute equine hepacivirus infection
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8435542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33713356
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hep.31802
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