Lanford Robert E, Guerra Bernadette, Bigger Catherine B, Lee Helen, Chavez Deborah, Brasky Kathleen M
Department of Virology and Immunology, Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research, San Antonio, TX 78227, USA.
Hepatology. 2007 Oct;46(4):999-1008. doi: 10.1002/hep.21776.
The mechanism of the interferon-alpha (IFNalpha)-induced antiviral response is not completely understood. We recently examined the transcriptional response to IFNalpha in uninfected chimpanzees. The transcriptional response to IFNalpha in the liver and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) was rapidly induced but was also rapidly down-regulated, with most interferon-alpha-stimulated genes (ISGs) returning to the baseline within 24 hours. We have extended these observations to include chimpanzees chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV). Remarkably, using total genome microarray analysis, we observed almost no induction of ISG transcripts in the livers of chronically infected animals following IFNalpha dosing, whereas the response in PBMCs was similar to that in uninfected animals. In agreement with this finding, no decrease in the viral load occurred with up to 12 weeks of pegylated IFNalpha therapy. The block in the response to exogenous IFNalpha appeared to be HCV-specific because the response in a hepatitis B virus-infected animal was similar to that of uninfected animals. The lack of a response to exogenous IFNalpha may be due to an already maximally induced ISG response because chronically HCV-infected chimpanzees already have a highly up-regulated hepatic ISG response. Alternatively, negative regulation may block the response to exogenous IFNalpha, yet it does not prevent the continued response to endogenous ISG stimuli. The IFNalpha response in chronically HCV-infected chimpanzees may be mechanistically similar to the null response in the human population.
In chimpanzees infected with HCV, the highly elevated hepatic ISG expression may prevent the further induction of ISGs and antiviral efficacy following an IFNalpha treatment.
干扰素-α(IFNα)诱导的抗病毒反应机制尚未完全明确。我们最近研究了未感染黑猩猩对IFNα的转录反应。肝脏和外周血单核细胞(PBMC)对IFNα的转录反应迅速被诱导,但也迅速下调,大多数干扰素-α刺激基因(ISG)在24小时内恢复到基线水平。我们将这些观察结果扩展到慢性丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染的黑猩猩。值得注意的是,通过全基因组微阵列分析,我们观察到在IFNα给药后,慢性感染动物肝脏中几乎没有ISG转录本的诱导,而PBMC中的反应与未感染动物相似。与这一发现一致,聚乙二醇化IFNα治疗长达12周时病毒载量没有下降。对外源性IFNα反应的阻断似乎是HCV特异性的,因为乙型肝炎病毒感染动物的反应与未感染动物相似。对外源性IFNα缺乏反应可能是由于ISG反应已经被最大程度诱导,因为慢性HCV感染的黑猩猩已经有高度上调的肝脏ISG反应。或者,负调节可能会阻断对外源性IFNα的反应,但它并不能阻止对内源性ISG刺激的持续反应。慢性HCV感染的黑猩猩中IFNα反应在机制上可能与人类群体中的无反应相似。
在感染HCV的黑猩猩中,肝脏ISG表达的高度升高可能会阻止IFNα治疗后ISG的进一步诱导和抗病毒疗效。