Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA 19111, USA.
Department of Molecular and Biomedical Science, School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
Viruses. 2021 Jan 30;13(2):210. doi: 10.3390/v13020210.
Human hepatitis B virus (HBV) can cause chronic, lifelong infection of the liver that may lead to persistent or episodic immune-mediated inflammation against virus-infected hepatocytes. This immune response results in elevated rates of killing of virus-infected hepatocytes, which may extend over many years or decades, lead to fibrosis and cirrhosis, and play a role in the high incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in HBV carriers. Immune-mediated inflammation appears to cause oxidative DNA damage to hepatocytes, which may also play a major role in hepatocarcinogenesis. An additional DNA damaging feature of chronic infections is random integration of HBV DNA into the chromosomal DNA of hepatocytes. While HBV DNA integration does not have a role in virus replication it may alter gene expression of the host cell. Indeed, most HCCs that arise in HBV carriers contain integrated HBV DNA and, in many, the integrant appears to have played a role in hepatocarcinogenesis. Clonal expansion of hepatocytes, which is a natural feature of liver biology, occurs because the hepatocyte population is self-renewing and therefore loses complexity due to random hepatocyte death and replacement by proliferation of surviving hepatocytes. This process may also represent a risk factor for the development of HCC. Interestingly, during chronic HBV infection, hepatocyte clones detected using integrated HBV DNA as lineage-specific markers, emerge that are larger than those expected to occur by random death and proliferation of hepatocytes. The emergence of these larger hepatocyte clones may reflect a survival advantage that could be explained by an ability to avoid the host immune response. While most of these larger hepatocyte clones are probably not preneoplastic, some may have already acquired preneoplastic changes. Thus, chronic inflammation in the HBV-infected liver may be responsible, at least in part, for both initiation of HCC via oxidative DNA damage and promotion of HCC via stimulation of hepatocyte proliferation through immune-mediated killing and compensatory division.
人类乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)可引起肝脏的慢性、终身感染,可能导致针对病毒感染肝细胞的持续或间歇性免疫介导炎症。这种免疫反应导致病毒感染肝细胞的杀伤率升高,这种情况可能持续多年或数十年,导致纤维化和肝硬化,并在 HBV 携带者中肝细胞癌(HCC)的高发中发挥作用。免疫介导的炎症似乎导致肝细胞的氧化 DNA 损伤,这也可能在肝癌发生中起主要作用。慢性感染的另一个 DNA 损伤特征是 HBV DNA 随机整合到肝细胞的染色体 DNA 中。虽然 HBV DNA 整合在病毒复制中没有作用,但它可能改变宿主细胞的基因表达。事实上,在 HBV 携带者中发生的大多数 HCC 都含有整合的 HBV DNA,并且在许多情况下,整合体似乎在肝癌发生中发挥了作用。肝细胞的克隆扩增是肝脏生物学的一个自然特征,因为肝细胞群体是自我更新的,因此由于随机的肝细胞死亡和幸存的肝细胞增殖导致复杂性丧失。这个过程也可能是 HCC 发展的一个危险因素。有趣的是,在慢性 HBV 感染期间,使用整合的 HBV DNA 作为谱系特异性标记检测到的肝细胞克隆出现,其大小大于随机肝细胞死亡和增殖所预期的大小。这些较大的肝细胞克隆的出现可能反映了一种生存优势,这种优势可以通过逃避宿主免疫反应来解释。虽然这些较大的肝细胞克隆中的大多数可能不是癌前的,但有些可能已经获得了癌前变化。因此,HBV 感染肝脏中的慢性炎症可能至少部分负责通过氧化 DNA 损伤启动 HCC,以及通过免疫介导的杀伤和代偿性分裂刺激肝细胞增殖来促进 HCC。