Among the many mutations found in the hepatitis B virus (HBV) genome, some have been associated with fulminant hepatitis, as exemplified by precore-defective mutations. The aim of this study was to determine whether such mutations also are found in Vietnamese cases of fulminant hepatitis B. The full-genome nucleotide sequence of HBV in three patients with fulminant hepatitis (F-2, F-3, and F-6) and one with acute hepatitis (A-3), who were admitted to Cho Ray Hospital, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam was ascertained. Additionally, two patients with fulminant hepatitis (F-1 and F-7) and three with acute hepatitis (A-1, A-2, and A-5) were examined only for the precore/core region of HBV. Remarkably, the nonsense mutation at precore codon 28 (Trp82Stop) was found in four of the five patients with fulminant hepatitis, while all the acute hepatitis patients harbored wild type (one had a mixture of wild and mutant types). The missense mutations within the core region, Ile97Leu and Pro130Ile/Thr/Ser, were also remarkable in fulminant hepatitis. Only F-2 was free from these precore/core mutations, but F-2 was unique in that it possessed a chimeric genotype: it could be classified into genotype C as a whole, but its X region was of genotype B, like the other four fulminant hepatitis isolates (F-1, F-3, F-6, and F-7). The codon 41 of the X protein was Pro in all three fulminant hepatitis cases examined for this region, while it was Ser in the wild-type isolates of genotype B. Of note as negative data, the mutations C1653T and T1753M of the enhancer II (Enh II) and A1762T and G1764A of the precore/core promoter regions, once reported to be relevant to severe or fulminant hepatitis, were not found in the present cases. The results with the Vietnamese cases of fulminant hepatitis corroborated results of previous studies with respect to the mutations Trp28Stop of precore and Ile97Leu and Pro130Ile/Thr/Ser of core, but not for the mutations within Enh II and precore/core promoter region. Whether the Ser41Pro mutation in the X region of genotype B HBV is Vietnam-specific or disease-specific deserves further investigation.
Mutations within T-cell or B-cell epitopes are suggested to have some influence on the clinical course of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. To investigate the relationship between liver cell injury and heterogeneity of the HBV core gene, we focused on the sequence of codon 130, which is located on both T- and B-cell epitopes, and serially analyzed the proportion of mutant virus (core130Thr) to wild-type virus (core130Pro) during the exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B. Sera obtained serially from five HBV carriers who had exacerbation of hepatitis, and three asymptomatic HBV carriers (ASCs) with persistently normal serum aminotransferase (ALT) values were studied, using the restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) method. Core130Pro predominated in the sera in the remission state, but core130Thr increased markedly in parallel with ALT elevation and decreased again after the ALT peak, followed by the predominance of core130Pro, in all the five patients. In one patient, the ratio of core130Thr/core130Pro (Thr/Pro) was more than 70% at the ALT peak. On the other hand, in sera from the three ASCs core130Pro always predominated, and no divergence was identified in the ratio of Thr/Pro. Our data suggest that codon 130 is one of the most important immunogenic regions in the HBV core gene and that elevation of Thr/Pro could be the result of immune selection.
Among the many mutations found in the hepatitis B virus (HBV) genome, some have been associated with fulminant hepatitis, as exemplified by precore-defective mutations. The aim of this study was to determine whether such mutations also are found in Vietnamese cases of fulminant hepatitis B. The full-genome nucleotide sequence of HBV in three patients with fulminant hepatitis (F-2, F-3, and F-6) and one with acute hepatitis (A-3), who were admitted to Cho Ray Hospital, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam was ascertained. Additionally, two patients with fulminant hepatitis (F-1 and F-7) and three with acute hepatitis (A-1, A-2, and A-5) were examined only for the precore/core region of HBV. Remarkably, the nonsense mutation at precore codon 28 (Trp82Stop) was found in four of the five patients with fulminant hepatitis, while all the acute hepatitis patients harbored wild type (one had a mixture of wild and mutant types). The missense mutations within the core region, Ile97Leu and Pro130Ile/Thr/Ser, were also remarkable in fulminant hepatitis. Only F-2 was free from these precore/core mutations, but F-2 was unique in that it possessed a chimeric genotype: it could be classified into genotype C as a whole, but its X region was of genotype B, like the other four fulminant hepatitis isolates (F-1, F-3, F-6, and F-7). The codon 41 of the X protein was Pro in all three fulminant hepatitis cases examined for this region, while it was Ser in the wild-type isolates of genotype B. Of note as negative data, the mutations C1653T and T1753M of the enhancer II (Enh II) and A1762T and G1764A of the precore/core promoter regions, once reported to be relevant to severe or fulminant hepatitis, were not found in the present cases. The results with the Vietnamese cases of fulminant hepatitis corroborated results of previous studies with respect to the mutations Trp28Stop of precore and Ile97Leu and Pro130Ile/Thr/Ser of core, but not for the mutations within Enh II and precore/core promoter region. Whether the Ser41Pro mutation in the X region of genotype B HBV is Vietnam-specific or disease-specific deserves further investigation.
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