Laboratory of Virology and Infectious Diseases, Center for the Study of Hepatitis C, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York.
Laboratory of Virology and Infectious Diseases, Center for the Study of Hepatitis C, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York; Department of Scientific Research, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China.
Gastroenterology. 2018 Feb;154(3):663-674.e7. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2017.10.041. Epub 2017 Dec 24.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: The 4 genotypes of hepatitis E virus (HEV) that infect humans (genotypes 1-4) vary in geographical distribution, transmission, and pathogenesis. Little is known about the properties of HEV or its hosts that contribute to these variations. Primary isolates grow poorly in cell culture; most studies have relied on variants adapted to cancer cell lines, which likely alter virus biology. We investigated the infection and replication of primary isolates of HEV in hepatocyte-like cells (HLCs) derived from human embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cells.
Using a cell culture-adapted genotype 3 strain and primary isolates of genotypes 1 to 4, we compared viral replication kinetics, sensitivity to drugs, and ability of HEV to activate the innate immune response. We studied HLCs using quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and immunofluorescence assay and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. We used an embryonic stem cell line that can be induced to express the CRISPR-Cas9 machinery to disrupt the peptidylprolyl isomerase A gene, encoding cyclophilin A (CYPA), a protein reported to inhibit replication of cell culture-adapted HEV. We further modified this line to rescue expression of CYPA before terminal differentiation to HLCs and performed HEV infection studies.
HLCs were permissive for infection by nonadapted, primary isolates of HEV genotypes 1 to 4. HEV infection of HLCs induced a replication-dependent type III interferon response. Replication of primary HEV isolates, unlike the cell culture-adapted strain, was not affected by disruption of the peptidylprolyl isomerase A gene or exposure to the CYPA inhibitor cyclosporine A.
Cell culture adaptations alter the replicative capacities of HEV. HLCs offer an improved, physiologically relevant, and genetically tractable system for studying the replication of primary HEV isolates. HLCs could provide a model to aid development of HEV drugs and a system to guide personalized regimens, especially for patients with chronic hepatitis E who have developed resistance to ribavirin.
感染人类的肝炎病毒 4 种基因型(1-4 型)在地理分布、传播和发病机制方面存在差异。人们对有助于这些差异的 HEV 特性或其宿主特性知之甚少。原发性分离株在细胞培养中生长不良;大多数研究依赖于适应癌细胞系的变异株,这可能改变病毒生物学。我们研究了源自人胚胎和诱导多能干细胞的肝样细胞(HLC)中,HEV 原发性分离株的感染和复制。
使用细胞培养适应的 3 型基因型株和 1-4 型的原发性分离株,我们比较了病毒复制动力学、对药物的敏感性以及 HEV 激活先天免疫反应的能力。我们使用定量逆转录聚合酶链反应和免疫荧光检测以及酶联免疫吸附试验研究 HLC。我们使用一种可以被诱导表达 CRISPR-Cas9 机制的胚胎干细胞系,破坏编码亲环素 A(CYPA)的肽基脯氨酰异构酶 A 基因,该蛋白据报道可抑制细胞培养适应的 HEV 复制。我们进一步修改了该系,使其在分化为 HLC 之前可恢复 CYPA 的表达,并进行了 HEV 感染研究。
未经适应的原发性 1-4 型 HEV 分离株可感染 HLC。HLC 感染可诱导依赖于复制的 III 型干扰素反应。与细胞培养适应株不同,原发性 HEV 分离株的复制不受肽基脯氨酰异构酶 A 基因缺失或亲环素 A 抑制剂环孢素 A 的影响。
细胞培养适应改变了 HEV 的复制能力。HLC 为研究原发性 HEV 分离株的复制提供了一种改进的、生理相关的和遗传上易于处理的系统。HLC 可提供一种模型来帮助开发 HEV 药物,并为指导个体化治疗方案提供系统,特别是对于已对利巴韦林产生耐药性的慢性丙型肝炎患者。