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HDV Can Constrain HBV Genetic Evolution in HBsAg: Implications for the Identification of Innovative Pharmacological Targets.

Authors :
Colagrossi L
Salpini R
Scutari R
Carioti L
Battisti A
Piermatteo L
Bertoli A
Fabeni L
Minichini C
Trimoulet P
Fleury H
Nebuloso E
De Cristofaro M
Cappiello G
Spanò A
Malagnino V
Mari T
Barlattani A
Iapadre N
Lichtner M
Mastroianni C
Lenci I
Pasquazzi C
De Sanctis GM
Galeota Lanza A
Stanzione M
Stornaiuolo G
Marignani M
Sarmati L
Andreoni M
Angelico M
Ceccherini-Silberstein F
Perno CF
Coppola N
Svicher V
Source :
Viruses [Viruses] 2018 Jul 09; Vol. 10 (7). Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Jul 09.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Chronic HBV + HDV infection is associated with greater risk of liver fibrosis, earlier hepatic decompensation, and liver cirrhosis hepatocellular carcinoma compared to HBV mono-infection. However, to-date no direct anti-HDV drugs are available in clinical practice. Here, we identified conserved and variable regions in HBsAg and HDAg domains in HBV + HDV infection, a critical finding for the design of innovative therapeutic agents. The extent of amino-acid variability was measured by Shannon-Entropy (Sn) in HBsAg genotype-d sequences from 31 HBV + HDV infected and 62 HBV mono-infected patients (comparable for demographics and virological-parameters), and in 47 HDAg genotype-1 sequences. Positions with Sn = 0 were defined as conserved. The percentage of conserved HBsAg-positions was significantly higher in HBV + HDV infection than HBV mono-infection ( p = 0.001). Results were confirmed after stratification for HBeAg-status and patients’ age. A Sn = 0 at specific positions in the C-terminus HBsAg were correlated with higher HDV-RNA, suggesting that conservation of these positions can preserve HDV-fitness. Conversely, HDAg was characterized by a lower percentage of conserved-residues than HBsAg ( p < 0.001), indicating higher functional plasticity. Furthermore, specific HDAg-mutations were significantly correlated with higher HDV-RNA, suggesting a role in conferring HDV replicative-advantage. Among HDAg-domains, only the virus-assembly signal exhibited a high genetic conservation (75% of conserved-residues). In conclusion, HDV can constrain HBsAg genetic evolution to preserve its fitness. The identification of conserved regions in HDAg poses the basis for designing innovative targets against HDV-infection.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1999-4915
Volume :
10
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Viruses
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29987240
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/v10070363