Snooks Michelle J, Bhat Purnima, Mackenzie Jason, Counihan Natalie A, Vaughan Nicola, Anderson David A
Ian Potter Hepatitis Research Laboratory, Macfarlane Burnet Institute for Medical Research and Public Health, Melbourne 3004, Australia.
J Virol. 2008 Sep;82(17):8733-42. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00219-08. Epub 2008 Jun 25.
Hepatitis A virus (HAV) is an enterically transmitted virus that replicates predominantly in hepatocytes within the liver before excretion via bile through feces. Hepatocytes are polarized epithelial cells, and it has been assumed that the virus load in bile results from direct export of HAV via the apical domain of polarized hepatocytes. We have developed a subclone of hepatocyte-derived HepG2 cells (clone N6) that maintains functional characteristics of polarized hepatocytes but displays morphology typical of columnar epithelial cells, rather than the complex morphology that is typical of hepatocytes. N6 cells form microcolonies of polarized cells when grown on glass and confluent monolayers of polarized cells on semipermeable membranes. When N6 microcolonies were exposed to HAV, infection was restricted to peripheral cells of polarized colonies, whereas all cells could be infected in colonies of nonpolarized HepG2 cells (clone C11) or following disruption of tight junctions in N6 colonies with EGTA. This suggests that viral entry occurs predominantly via the basolateral plasma membrane, consistent with uptake of virus from the bloodstream after enteric exposure, as expected. Viral export was also found to be markedly vectorial in N6 but not C11 cells. However, rather than being exported from the apical domain as expected, more than 95% of HAV was exported via the basolateral domain of N6 cells, suggesting that virus is first excreted from infected hepatocytes into the bloodstream rather than to the biliary tree. Enteric excretion of HAV may therefore rely on reuptake and transcytosis of progeny HAV across hepatocytes into the bile. These studies provide the first example of the interactions between viruses and polarized hepatocytes.
甲型肝炎病毒(HAV)是一种经肠道传播的病毒,主要在肝脏内的肝细胞中复制,然后通过胆汁经粪便排出。肝细胞是极化上皮细胞,一直以来人们认为胆汁中的病毒载量是由HAV通过极化肝细胞的顶端结构域直接输出所致。我们培育了一种源自肝细胞的HepG2细胞亚克隆(克隆N6),它保留了极化肝细胞的功能特性,但呈现出柱状上皮细胞的典型形态,而非肝细胞典型的复杂形态。当在玻璃上生长时,N6细胞形成极化细胞的微集落,在半透膜上形成极化细胞的汇合单层。当N6微集落暴露于HAV时,感染仅限于极化集落的外周细胞,而在非极化的HepG2细胞(克隆C11)集落中所有细胞均可被感染,或者在用乙二醇双四乙酸(EGTA)破坏N6集落中的紧密连接后所有细胞也可被感染。这表明病毒主要通过基底外侧质膜进入,这与肠道暴露后从血液中摄取病毒的预期情况一致。还发现病毒输出在N6细胞中具有明显的方向性,而在C11细胞中则不然。然而,与预期的从顶端结构域输出不同,超过95%的HAV是通过N6细胞的基底外侧结构域输出的,这表明病毒首先从受感染的肝细胞排泄到血液中,而不是排泄到胆管树中。因此,HAV的肠道排泄可能依赖于子代HAV跨肝细胞的再摄取和转胞吞作用进入胆汁。这些研究提供了病毒与极化肝细胞相互作用的首个实例。