Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Lewis Thomas Laboratory, Washington Road, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA.
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Medicine, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Sci Transl Med. 2018 Jun 27;10(447). doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aap9328.
Chronic delta hepatitis, caused by hepatitis delta virus (HDV), is the most severe form of viral hepatitis, affecting at least 20 million hepatitis B virus (HBV)-infected patients worldwide. HDV/HBV co- or superinfections are major drivers for hepatocarcinogenesis. Antiviral treatments exist only for HBV and can only suppress but not cure infection. Development of more effective therapies has been impeded by the scarcity of suitable small-animal models. We created a transgenic (tg) mouse model for HDV expressing the functional receptor for HBV and HDV, the human sodium taurocholate cotransporting peptide NTCP. Both HBV and HDV entered hepatocytes in these mice in a glycoprotein-dependent manner, but one or more postentry blocks prevented HBV replication. In contrast, HDV persistently infected hNTCP tg mice coexpressing the HBV envelope, consistent with HDV dependency on the HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) for packaging and spread. In immunocompromised mice lacking functional B, T, and natural killer cells, viremia lasted at least 80 days but resolved within 14 days in immunocompetent animals, demonstrating that lymphocytes are critical for controlling HDV infection. Although acute HDV infection did not cause overt liver damage in this model, cell-intrinsic and cellular innate immune responses were induced. We further demonstrated that single and dual treatment with myrcludex B and lonafarnib efficiently suppressed viremia but failed to cure HDV infection at the doses tested. This small-animal model with inheritable susceptibility to HDV opens opportunities for studying viral pathogenesis and immune responses and for testing novel HDV therapeutics.
慢性 delta 肝炎由 delta 肝炎病毒 (HDV) 引起,是最严重的病毒性肝炎形式,影响全球至少 2000 万乙型肝炎病毒 (HBV) 感染者。HDV/HBV 合并或重叠感染是肝癌发生的主要驱动因素。目前仅存在针对 HBV 的抗病毒治疗方法,这些方法只能抑制而不能治愈感染。由于缺乏合适的小动物模型,开发更有效的治疗方法受到了阻碍。我们创建了一种表达 HBV 和 HDV 功能性受体的转基因 (tg) 小鼠模型,即人牛磺胆酸钠共转运多肽 NTCP。在这些小鼠中,HBV 和 HDV 均以糖蛋白依赖的方式进入肝细胞,但一个或多个进入后阻断阻止了 HBV 复制。相比之下,HDV 持续感染共表达 HBV 包膜的 hNTCP tg 小鼠,这与 HDV 依赖 HBV 表面抗原 (HBsAg) 进行包装和传播一致。在缺乏功能性 B、T 和自然杀伤细胞的免疫功能低下小鼠中,病毒血症至少持续 80 天,但在免疫功能正常的动物中 14 天内即可消除,表明淋巴细胞对控制 HDV 感染至关重要。虽然在该模型中,急性 HDV 感染不会导致明显的肝损伤,但会诱导细胞内和细胞固有免疫反应。我们进一步证明,单次和双重使用 myrcludex B 和 lonafarnib 可有效抑制病毒血症,但在测试剂量下未能治愈 HDV 感染。这种具有遗传性易感性的 HDV 小动物模型为研究病毒发病机制和免疫反应以及测试新型 HDV 治疗方法提供了机会。