Chen Fuwang, Wettengel Jochen M, Gegenfurtner Florian, Moosmüller Judith, Bunse Till, Jeske Samuel D, Hagen Philipp, Ni Yi, Urban Stephan, Protzer Ulrike
Institute of Virology, School of Medicine and Health, Technical University of Munich/Helmholtz Munich, Munich, Germany.
German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), partner site Munich, Munich, Germany.
J Virol. 2025 Apr 15;99(4):e0183324. doi: 10.1128/jvi.01833-24. Epub 2025 Mar 5.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a significant global health threat, resulting in more than 800,000 deaths annually. Since HBV naturally infects only humans and chimpanzees, the development and evaluation of new therapies for chronic HBV infection are hindered by the lack of suitable animal models. Human sodium-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) is a critical factor for HBV binding and entry, exhibiting species-specific differences in the amino acid sequences. This study investigated NTCP orthologs from various species to determine their capability to support HBV binding and infection. We demonstrate that nonhuman NTCP orthologs from woodchuck, ferret, aardvark, horse, rabbit, whale, big brown bat, cat, and rhinoceros support HBV binding and cellular entry, thereby rendering HepG2 cells susceptible to HBV infection upon expression. NTCP orthologs from hamster, goat, and cow support HBV binding but require specific amino acid exchanges to facilitate HBV infection. We show that replacement of the functional region, amino acids (aa) 84-87, in hamster NTCP with the human counterpart allows infection of HepG2 cells expressing the chimeric NTCP variant. Furthermore, we demonstrate that aa 82 in goat and cow NTCP, close to this functional region, needs to be modified to support HBV infection. This study could help identify previously unknown HBV reservoirs and may facilitate the establishment of new animal models.IMPORTANCEThe HBV entry receptor NTCP provides a natural barrier for cross-species transmission. We identified species-specific NTCP orthologues from woodchuck, ferret, aardvark, horse, rabbit, whale, big brown bat, cat, and rhinoceros that support HBV infection. This may reveal potential HBV reservoirs and facilitate the development of new HBV animal models.
乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)感染是对全球健康的重大威胁,每年导致超过80万人死亡。由于HBV仅自然感染人类和黑猩猩,缺乏合适的动物模型阻碍了慢性HBV感染新疗法的开发和评估。人钠-牛磺胆酸共转运多肽(NTCP)是HBV结合和进入的关键因素,其氨基酸序列存在物种特异性差异。本研究调查了来自不同物种的NTCP直系同源物,以确定它们支持HBV结合和感染的能力。我们证明,来自土拨鼠、雪貂、食蚁兽、马、兔子、鲸鱼、大棕蝠、猫和犀牛的非人NTCP直系同源物支持HBV结合和细胞进入,从而使HepG2细胞在表达后易受HBV感染。来自仓鼠、山羊和牛的NTCP直系同源物支持HBV结合,但需要特定的氨基酸交换来促进HBV感染。我们表明,用人类对应物替换仓鼠NTCP中的功能区氨基酸(aa)84-87,可使表达嵌合NTCP变体的HepG2细胞受到感染。此外,我们证明,山羊和牛NTCP中靠近该功能区的第82位氨基酸需要修饰以支持HBV感染。本研究有助于识别以前未知的HBV储存宿主,并可能促进新动物模型的建立。重要性HBV进入受体NTCP为跨物种传播提供了天然屏障。我们从土拨鼠、雪貂、食蚁兽、马、兔子、鲸鱼、大棕蝠、猫和犀牛中鉴定出支持HBV感染的物种特异性NTCP直系同源物。这可能揭示潜在的HBV储存宿主,并促进新的HBV动物模型的开发。