Israelow Benjamin, Narbus Christopher M, Sourisseau Marion, Evans Matthew J
Department of Microbiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
Hepatology. 2014 Oct;60(4):1170-9. doi: 10.1002/hep.27227. Epub 2014 Aug 21.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) exposure leads to persistent life-long infections characterized by chronic inflammation often developing into cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The mechanism by which HCV remains in the liver while inducing an inflammatory and antiviral response remains unclear. Though the innate immune response to HCV in patients seems to be quite active, HCV has been shown in cell culture to employ a diverse array of innate immune antagonists, which suggests that current model systems to study interactions between HCV and the innate immune system are not representative of what happens in vivo. We recently showed that hepatoma-derived HepG2 cells support the entire HCV life cycle if the liver-specific microRNA, miR-122, is expressed along with the entry factor, CD81 (termed HepG2-HFL cells). We found that there was a striking difference in these cells' ability to sustain HCV infection and spread when compared with Huh-7 and Huh-7.5 cells. Additionally, HepG2-HFL cells exhibited a more robust antiviral response when challenged with other RNA viruses and viral mimetics than Huh-7 and Huh-7.5 cells. HCV infection elicited a potent interferon-lambda (IFN-λ), IFN-stimulated gene, and cytokine response in HepG2-HFL cells, but not in Huh-7 cells, suggesting that HepG2-HFL cells more faithfully recapitulate the innate immune response to HCV infection in vivo. Using this model, we found that blocking the retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I)-like receptor pathway or the IFN-λ-signaling pathway promoted HCV infection and spread in HepG2-HFL cells.
HepG2-HFL cells represent a new system to study the interaction between HCV and the innate immune system, solidifying the importance of IFN-λ in hepatic response to HCV infection and revealing non-redundant roles of RIG-I and melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5 in HCV recognition and repression of infection.
丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)暴露会导致终身持续性感染,其特征为慢性炎症,常发展为肝硬化和肝细胞癌。HCV在肝脏中持续存在并引发炎症和抗病毒反应的机制尚不清楚。尽管患者对HCV的先天免疫反应似乎相当活跃,但在细胞培养中已表明HCV会使用多种先天免疫拮抗剂,这表明当前用于研究HCV与先天免疫系统相互作用的模型系统不能代表体内实际发生的情况。我们最近发现,如果肝脏特异性微小RNA miR-122与进入因子CD81一起表达(称为HepG2-HFL细胞),肝癌来源的HepG2细胞可支持HCV的整个生命周期。我们发现,与Huh-7和Huh-7.5细胞相比,这些细胞维持HCV感染和传播的能力存在显著差异。此外,与Huh-7和Huh-7.5细胞相比,HepG2-HFL细胞在用其他RNA病毒和病毒模拟物刺激时表现出更强有力的抗病毒反应。HCV感染在HepG2-HFL细胞中引发了强烈的干扰素λ(IFN-λ)、IFN刺激基因和细胞因子反应,但在Huh-7细胞中未引发,这表明HepG2-HFL细胞更忠实地重现了体内对HCV感染的先天免疫反应。使用该模型,我们发现阻断视黄酸诱导基因I(RIG-I)样受体途径或IFN-λ信号通路会促进HCV在HepG2-HFL细胞中的感染和传播。
HepG2-HFL细胞代表了一种研究HCV与先天免疫系统相互作用的新系统,巩固了IFN-λ在肝脏对HCV感染反应中的重要性,并揭示了RIG-I和黑色素瘤分化相关蛋白5在HCV识别和感染抑制中的非冗余作用。