Lu X, Block T M, Gerlich W H
Institute of Medical Virology, Justus-Liebig-University, Giessen, Germany.
J Virol. 1996 Apr;70(4):2277-85. doi: 10.1128/JVI.70.4.2277-2285.1996.
The human hepatoblastoma cell line HepG2 produces and secretes hepatitis B virus (HBV) after transfection of cloned HBV DNA. Intact virions do not infect these cells, although they attach to the surface of the HepG2 cell through binding sites in the pre-S1 domain. Entry of enveloped virions into the cell often requires proteolytic cleavage of a viral surface protein that is involved in fusion between the cell membrane and the viral envelope. Recently, we observed pre-S-independent, nonspecific binding between hepatitis B surface (HBs) particles and HepG2 cells after treatment of HBs antigen particles with V8 protease, which cleaves next to a putative fusion sequence. Chymotrypsin removed this fusion sequence and did not induce binding. In this study, we postulate that lack of a suitable fusion-activating protease was the reason why the HepG2 cells were not susceptible to HBV. To test this hypothesis, virions were partially purified from the plasma of HBV carriers and treated with either staphylococcal V8 or porcine chymotrypsin protease. Protease-digested virus lost reactivity with pre-S2-specific antibody but remained morphologically intact as determined by electron microscopy. After separation from the proteases, virions were incubated with HepG2 cells at pH 5.5. Cultures inoculated with either intact or chymotrypsin-digested virus did not contain detectable levels of intracellular HBV DNA at any time following infection. However, in cultures inoculated with V8-digested virions, HBV-specific products, including covalently closed circular DNA, viral RNA, and viral pre-S2 antigen, could be detected in a time-dependent manner following infection. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed that 10 to 30% of the infected HepG2 cells produced HBV antigen. Persistent secretion of virus by the infected HepG2 cells lasted at least 14 days and was maintained during several reseeding steps. The results show that V8-digested HBV can productively infect tissue cultures of HepG2 cells. It is suggested that proteolysis-dependent exposure of a fusion domain within the envelope protein of HBV is necessary during natural infection.
人肝癌细胞系HepG2在转染克隆的乙肝病毒(HBV)DNA后能产生并分泌HBV。完整的病毒粒子不会感染这些细胞,尽管它们通过前S1结构域中的结合位点附着在HepG2细胞表面。包膜病毒粒子进入细胞通常需要对一种参与细胞膜与病毒包膜融合的病毒表面蛋白进行蛋白水解切割。最近,我们观察到在用V8蛋白酶处理乙肝表面(HBs)抗原颗粒后,HBs颗粒与HepG2细胞之间存在不依赖前S的非特异性结合,V8蛋白酶在一个假定的融合序列旁边进行切割。胰凝乳蛋白酶去除了这个融合序列,并未诱导结合。在本研究中,我们推测HepG2细胞对HBV不敏感的原因是缺乏合适的融合激活蛋白酶。为了验证这一假设,从HBV携带者的血浆中部分纯化病毒粒子,并用葡萄球菌V8蛋白酶或猪胰凝乳蛋白酶处理。蛋白酶消化后的病毒与前S2特异性抗体失去反应性,但通过电子显微镜观察,其形态保持完整。与蛋白酶分离后,将病毒粒子在pH 5.5条件下与HepG2细胞孵育。接种完整病毒或胰凝乳蛋白酶消化病毒的培养物在感染后的任何时间都未检测到细胞内HBV DNA的可检测水平。然而,在接种V8蛋白酶消化病毒粒子的培养物中,感染后可随时间检测到包括共价闭合环状DNA、病毒RNA和病毒前S2抗原在内的HBV特异性产物。免疫荧光分析显示,10%至30%的感染HepG2细胞产生HBV抗原。感染的HepG2细胞持续分泌病毒至少1天,并在多次传代步骤中得以维持。结果表明,V8蛋白酶消化的HBV能有效感染HepG2细胞的组织培养物。提示在自然感染过程中,HBV包膜蛋白内融合结构域的蛋白水解依赖性暴露是必要的。