Rapid induction of virus-neutralizing antibodies and viral clearance in a single-source outbreak of hepatitis C

Jan M. Pestka(University of Freiburg), Mirjam B. Zeisel(University of Freiburg), Edith Bläser(University of Freiburg), Peter Schürmann(University of Freiburg), Birke Bartosch(École Normale Supérieure de Lyon), François‐Loïc Cosset(École Normale Supérieure de Lyon), Arvind H. Patel(University of Glasgow), Helga Meisel(Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), Jens Baumert(Institute of Groundwater Ecology), Sergei Viazov(Essen University Hospital), Kay Rispeter(Essen University Hospital), Hubert E. Blum(University of Freiburg), Michael Roggendorf(Essen University Hospital), Thomas F. Baumert(Inserm)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 29, 2007
Cited by 554Open Access
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Abstract

In contrast to a detailed understanding of antiviral cellular immune responses, the impact of neutralizing antibodies for the resolution of acute hepatitis C is poorly defined. The analysis of neutralizing responses has been hampered by the fact that patient cohorts as well as hepatitis C virus (HCV) strains are usually heterogeneous, and that clinical data from acute-phase and long-term follow-up after infection are not readily available. Using an infectious retroviral HCV pseudoparticle model system, we studied a cohort of women accidentally exposed to the same HCV strain of known sequence. In this single-source outbreak of hepatitis C, viral clearance was associated with a rapid induction of neutralizing antibodies in the early phase of infection. Neutralizing antibodies decreased or disappeared after recovery from HCV infection. In contrast, chronic HCV infection was characterized by absent or low-titer neutralizing antibodies in the early phase of infection and the persistence of infection despite the induction of cross-neutralizing antibodies in the late phase of infection. These data suggest that rapid induction of neutralizing antibodies during the early phase of infection may contribute to control of HCV infection. This finding may have important implications for understanding the pathogenesis of HCV infection and for the development of novel preventive and therapeutic antiviral strategies.


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