Efficient long-term amplification of hepatitis B virus isolates after infection of slow proliferating HepG2-NTCP cells

[Display omitted] •Cell culture system that mimicks complete HBV life cycle from entry to egress.•Efficient in vitro infection with crude HBV patient sera.•Up to 50- and 1,300-fold net amplification of patient- and cell culture-derived input HBV in the supernatant.•Polyethylene glycol-independent HB...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hepatology 2019-08, Vol.71 (2), p.289-300
Hauptverfasser: König, Alexander, Yang, Jaewon, Jo, Eunji, Park, Kyu Ho Paul, Kim, Hyun, Than, Thoa Thi, Song, Xiyong, Qi, Xiaoxuan, Dai, Xinghong, Park, Soonju, Shum, David, Ryu, Wang-Shick, Kim, Jung-Hee, Yoon, Seung Kew, Park, Jun Yong, Ahn, Sang Hoon, Han, Kwang-Hyub, Gerlich, Wolfram Hubert, Windisch, Marc Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Cell culture system that mimicks complete HBV life cycle from entry to egress.•Efficient in vitro infection with crude HBV patient sera.•Up to 50- and 1,300-fold net amplification of patient- and cell culture-derived input HBV in the supernatant.•Polyethylene glycol-independent HBV spread to adjacent cells, forming infected cell clusters.•Evaluation of patient- and cell culture-derived HBV amplification w/wo antivirals over 8 weeks. As hepatitis B virus (HBV) spreads through the infected liver it is simultaneously secreted into the blood. HBV-susceptible in vitro infection models do not efficiently amplify viral progeny or support cell-to-cell spread. We sought to establish a cell culture system for the amplification of infectious HBV from clinical specimens. An HBV-susceptible sodium-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide-overexpressing HepG2 cell clone (HepG2-NTCPsec+) producing high titers of infectious progeny was selected. Secreted HBV progeny were characterized by native gel electrophoresis and electron microscopy. Comparative RNA-seq transcriptomics was performed to quantify the expression of host proviral and restriction factors. Viral spread routes were evaluated using HBV entry- or replication inhibitors, visualization of viral cell-to-cell spread in reporter cells, and nearest neighbor infection determination. Amplification kinetics of HBV genotypes B-D were analyzed. Infected HepG2-NTCPsec+ secreted high levels of large HBV surface protein-enveloped infectious HBV progeny with typical appearance under electron microscopy. RNA-seq transcriptomics revealed that HBV does not induce significant gene expression changes in HepG2-NTCPsec+, however, transcription factors favoring HBV amplification were more strongly expressed than in less permissive HepG2-NTCPsec−. Upon inoculation with HBV-containing patient sera, rates of infected cells increased from 10% initially to 70% by viral spread to adjacent cells, and viral progeny and antigens were efficiently secreted. HepG2-NTCPsec+ supported up to 1,300-fold net amplification of HBV genomes depending on the source of virus. Viral spread and amplification were abolished by entry and replication inhibitors; viral rebound was observed after inhibitor discontinuation. The novel HepG2-NTCPsec+ cells efficiently support the complete HBV life cycle, long-term viral spread and amplification of HBV derived from patients or cell culture, resembling relevant features of HBV-infected patients. Cu
ISSN:0168-8278
1600-0641
DOI:10.1016/j.jhep.2019.04.010