Persistent Hepatitis C Virus Infection In Vitro: Coevolution of Virus andHost

Jin Zhong(Scripps Research Institute), Pablo Gastaminza(Scripps Research Institute), Josan Chung(Scripps Research Institute), Zania Stamataki(Scripps Research Institute), Masanori Isogawa(University of Birmingham), Guofeng Cheng(University of Birmingham), Jane A. McKeating(University of Birmingham), Francis V. Chisari(Scripps Research Institute)
Journal of Virology
October 27, 2006
Cited by 245Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The virological and cellular consequences of persistent hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection have been elusive due to the absence of the requisite experimental systems. Here, we report the establishment and the characteristics of persistent in vitro infection of human hepatoma-derived cells by a recently described HCV genotype 2a infectious molecular clone. Persistent in vitro infection was characterized by the selection of viral variants that displayed accelerated expansion kinetics, higher peak titers, and increased buoyant densities. Sequencing analysis revealed the selection of a single adaptive mutation in the HCV E2 envelope protein that was largely responsible for the variant phenotype. In parallel, as the virus became more aggressive, cells that were resistant to infection emerged, displaying escape mechanisms operative at the level of viral entry, HCV RNA replication, or both. Collectively, these results reveal the existence of coevolutionary events during persistent HCV infection that favor survival of both virus and host.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis