Institut Pasteur, Unité Hépacivirus et Immunité Innée, Département de Virologie, Paris, France.
PLoS One. 2011;6(10):e26637. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026637. Epub 2011 Oct 21.
A distinctive feature of HCV is that its life cycle depends on lipoprotein metabolism. Viral morphogenesis and secretion follow the very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) biogenesis pathway and, consequently, infectious HCV in the serum is associated with triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TRL). Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) hydrolyzes TRL within chylomicrons and VLDL but, independently of its catalytic activity, it has a bridging activity, mediating the hepatic uptake of chylomicrons and VLDL remnants. We previously showed that exogenously added LPL increases HCV binding to hepatoma cells by acting as a bridge between virus-associated lipoproteins and cell surface heparan sulfate, while simultaneously decreasing infection levels. We show here that LPL efficiently inhibits cell infection with two HCV strains produced in hepatoma cells or in primary human hepatocytes transplanted into uPA-SCID mice with fully functional human ApoB-lipoprotein profiles. Viruses produced in vitro or in vivo were separated on iodixanol gradients into low and higher density populations, and the infection of Huh 7.5 cells by both virus populations was inhibited by LPL. The effect of LPL depended on its enzymatic activity. However, the lipase inhibitor tetrahydrolipstatin restored only a minor part of HCV infectivity, suggesting an important role of the LPL bridging function in the inhibition of infection. We followed HCV cell entry by immunoelectron microscopy with anti-envelope and anti-core antibodies. These analyses demonstrated the internalization of virus particles into hepatoma cells and their presence in intracellular vesicles and associated with lipid droplets. In the presence of LPL, HCV was retained at the cell surface. We conclude that LPL efficiently inhibits HCV infection by acting on TRL associated with HCV particles through mechanisms involving its lipolytic function, but mostly its bridging function. These mechanisms lead to immobilization of the virus at the cell surface. HCV-associated lipoproteins may therefore be a promising target for the development of new therapeutic approaches.
HCV 的一个显著特征是其生命周期依赖于脂蛋白代谢。病毒形态发生和分泌遵循极低密度脂蛋白(VLDL)的生物发生途径,因此,血清中的感染性 HCV 与富含甘油三酯的脂蛋白(TRL)相关。脂蛋白脂肪酶(LPL)水解乳糜微粒和 VLDL 中的 TRL,但独立于其催化活性,它具有桥接活性,介导乳糜微粒和 VLDL 残粒的肝摄取。我们之前表明,外源性添加的 LPL 通过作为病毒相关脂蛋白与细胞表面硫酸乙酰肝素之间的桥梁,增加 HCV 与肝癌细胞的结合,同时降低感染水平。我们在这里表明,LPL 有效地抑制了两种 HCV 株的细胞感染,这两种 HCV 株分别在肝癌细胞或在具有完全功能性人 ApoB-脂蛋白谱的 uPA-SCID 小鼠中移植的原代人肝细胞中产生。在碘克沙醇梯度上,在体外或体内产生的病毒被分离成低和高密度群体,LPL 抑制了 Huh 7.5 细胞对这两种病毒群体的感染。LPL 的作用取决于其酶活性。然而,脂肪酶抑制剂四氢拉帕他汀仅恢复了 HCV 感染性的一小部分,这表明 LPL 桥接功能在抑制感染中起着重要作用。我们通过用抗 envelope 和抗 core 抗体进行免疫电子显微镜观察来跟踪 HCV 细胞进入。这些分析表明病毒颗粒被内化到肝癌细胞中,并存在于细胞内囊泡中,并与脂滴相关。在 LPL 的存在下,HCV 被保留在细胞表面。我们得出结论,LPL 通过作用于与 HCV 颗粒相关的 TRL,通过涉及其脂解功能但主要是桥接功能的机制,有效地抑制 HCV 感染。这些机制导致病毒在细胞表面固定。因此,与 HCV 相关的脂蛋白可能是开发新治疗方法的有前途的靶标。