Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection causes chronic liver diseases and is a global public health problem. Detailed analyses of HCV have been hampered by the lack of viral culture systems. Subgenomic replicons of the JFH1 genotype 2a strain cloned from an individual with fulminant hepatitis replicate efficiently in cell culture. Here we show that the JFH1 genome replicates efficiently and supports secretion of viral particles after transfection into a human hepatoma cell line (Huh7). Particles have a density of about 1.15-1.17 g/ml and a spherical morphology with an average diameter of about 55 nm. Secreted virus is infectious for Huh7 cells and infectivity can be neutralized by CD81-specific antibodies and by immunoglobulins from chronically infected individuals. The cell culture-generated HCV is infectious for chimpanzee. This system provides a powerful tool for studying the viral life cycle and developing antiviral strategies.
Chronic liver disease caused by infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an important global health problem that currently affects 170 million people. A major impediment in HCV research and drug development has been the lack of culture systems supporting virus production. This obstacle was recently overcome by using JFH1-based full-length genomes that allow production of viruses infectious both in vitro and in vivo. Although this improvement was important, because of the restriction to the JFH1 isolate and a single chimera consisting of J6CF and JFH1-derived sequences, broadly based comparative studies between different HCV strains were not possible. Therefore, in this study we created a series of further chimeric genomes allowing production of infectious genotype (GT) 1a, 1b, 2a, and 3a particles. With the exception of the GT3a͞JFH1 chimera, efficient virus production was obtained when the genome fragments were fused via a site located right after the first transmembrane domain of NS2. The most efficient construct is a GT2a͞2a chimera consisting of J6CF-and JFH1-derived sequences connected via this junction. This hybrid, designated Jc1, yielded infectious titers 100 -to 1,000-fold higher than the parental isolate and all other chimeras, suggesting that determinants within the structural proteins govern kinetic and efficiency of virus assembly and release. Finally, we describe an E1-specific antiserum capable of neutralizing infectivity of all HCV chimeras.cross-neutralization ͉ cell culture system ͉ infection
The lack of an efficient system to produce hepatitis C virus (HCV) particles has impeded the analysis of the HCV life cycle. Recently, we along with others demonstrated that transfection of Huh7 hepatoma cells with a novel HCV isolate (JFH1) yields infectious viruses. To facilitate studies of HCV replication, we generated JFH1-based bicistronic luciferase reporter virus genomes. We found that RNA replication of the reporter construct was only slightly attenuated and that virus titers produced were only three- to fivefold lower compared to the parental virus, making these reporter viruses an ideal tool for quantitative analyses of HCV infections. To expand the scope of the system, we created two chimeric JFH1 luciferase reporter viruses with structural proteins from the Con1 (genotype 1b) and J6CF (genotype 2a) strains. Using these and the authentic JFH1 reporter viruses, we analyzed the early steps of the HCV life cycle. Our data show that the mode of virus entry is conserved between these isolates and involves CD81 as a key receptor for pH-dependent virus entry. Competition studies and time course experiments suggest that interactions of HCV with cell surface-resident glycosaminoglycans aid in efficient infection of Huh7 cells and that CD81 acts during a postattachment step. The reporter viruses described here should be instrumental for investigating the viral life cycle and for the development of HCV inhibitors.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is associated with chronic liver disease and currently affects about 3% of the world population. Although much has been learned about the function of individual viral proteins, the role of the HCV p7 protein in virus replication is not known. Recent data, however, suggest that it forms ion channels that may be targeted by antiviral compounds. Moreover, this protein was shown to be essential for infectivity in chimpanzee. Employing the novel HCV infection system and using a genetic approach to investigate the function of p7 in the viral replication cycle, we find that this protein is essential for efficient assembly and release of infectious virions across divergent virus strains. We show that p7 promotes virus particle production in a genotype-specific manner most likely due to interactions with other viral factors. Virus entry, on the other hand, is largely independent of p7, as the specific infectivity of released virions with a defect in p7 was not affected. Together, these observations indicate that p7 is primarily involved in the late phase of the HCV replication cycle. Finally, we note that p7 variants from different isolates deviate substantially in their capacity to promote virus production, suggesting that p7 is an important virulence factor that may modulate fitness and in turn virus persistence and pathogenesis.
The variability of the hepatitis C virus (HCV), which likely contributes to immune escape, is most pronounced in hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) of viral envelope protein 2. This domain is the target for neutralizing antibodies, and its deletion attenuates replication in vivo. Here we characterized the relevance of HVR1 for virus replication in vitro using cell culture-derived HCV. We show that HVR1 is dispensable for RNA replication. However, viruses lacking HVR1 (⌬HVR1) are less infectious, and separation by density gradients revealed that the population of ⌬HVR1 virions comprises fewer particles with low density. Strikingly, ⌬HVR1 particles with intermediate density (1.12 g/ml) are as infectious as wild-type virions, while those with low density (1.02 to 1.08 g/ml) are poorly infectious, despite quantities of RNA and core similar to those in wild-type particles. Moreover, ⌬HVR1 particles exhibited impaired fusion, a defect that was partially restored by an E1 mutation (I347L), which also rescues infectivity and which was selected during long-term culture. Finally, ⌬HVR1 particles were no longer neutralized by SR-B1-specific immunoglobulins but were more prone to neutralization and precipitation by soluble CD81, E2-specific monoclonal antibodies, and patient sera. These results suggest that HVR1 influences the biophysical properties of released viruses and that this domain is particularly important for infectivity of low-density particles. Moreover, they indicate that HVR1 obstructs the viral CD81 binding site and conserved neutralizing epitopes. These functions likely optimize virus replication, facilitate immune escape, and thus foster establishment and maintenance of a chronic infection.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a single-stranded positive-sense RNA virus of the family Flaviviridae that has infected an estimated 130 million people worldwide (1). Acute HCV infection is mostly asymptomatic; however, virus persistence can lead to severe liver disease, and within 20 years ca. 20% of chronically infected adults develop cirrhosis (46). In fact, morbidity associated with chronic HCV infection is the most common indication for orthotopic liver transplantation (7). The mechanisms that permit the virus to establish chronic infection in ca. 55 to 85% of cases (24) despite vigorous immune responses are incompletely understood.A number of studies have highlighted the pivotal role of strong, multispecific, and sustained T-cell responses for control of HCV infection (summarized in reference 53). Although resolution of acute HCV infection can occur in the absence of antibodies (47), mounting evidence indicates that neutralizing antibodies also contribute to protective immunity (summarized in reference 62). Nevertheless, HCV often successfully evades cellular and humoral immune pressure likely at least in part via the constant generation of variants created by an error-prone RNA replication machinery. In line with this notion, a high degree of HCV sequence evolution is associated with chronic disease, while a comparatively st...
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