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SEC14L2, a lipid-binding protein, regulates HCV replication in culture with inter- and intra-genotype variations

Authors :
Daniel Todt
Olympia E. Anastasiou
Eike Steinmann
Rui Costa
Jörg Timm
Francisco J. Zapatero-Belinchón
Lejla Timmer
Barbara Hertel
Christoph Sarrazin
Volker Lohmann
Andreas Walker
Denisa Bojkova
Christian Schenk
Thomas von Hahn
Michael P. Manns
Maren Ruckert
Sandra Ciesek
Source :
Journal of hepatology. 70(4)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background & Aims The lipid-binding protein, SEC14L2, is crucial for the efficient viral replication of clinical hepatitis C virus (HCV) isolates in cell culture. Given the role of SEC14L2 in HCV replication, we aimed to study a large number of HCV positive sera carrying genotypes 1–4, to identify viral factors associated with efficient replication in culture. Additionally, we investigated whether 13 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of SEC14L2 have an impact on RNA replication of naturally occurring HCV isolates. Methods We generated Huh-7.5 cell lines overexpressing SEC14L2 or 13 coding SNPs and tested 73 different HCV positive sera for in vitro replication. Furthermore, we genotyped a cohort of 262 patients with chronic HCV for the common SNP (rs757660) and investigated its effect on the clinical phenotype. Results HCV isolates from genotype 1, 2, 3 and 4 replicate in Huh-7.5 cells overexpressing SEC14L2. Interestingly, only subgenomic replicons from genotypes 1 and 3 showed enhanced replication whereas genotypes 2 and 4 remained unaffected. Furthermore, replication was independent of viral load. Importantly, all tested SNPs supported HCV RNA replication in vitro, while 1 SNP was associated with decreased SEC1L2 expression and viral RNA. All SNPs exhibited comparable cellular cholesterol and vitamin E abundance in naive Huh-7.5 cells. Conclusions This large screen of natural HCV isolates of 4 genotypes underscores the relevance of SEC14L2 as an in vitro HCV host factor. Additionally, SEC14L2 variants appear to recapitulate the wild-type enhancement of HCV replication. Variant rs191341134 showed a decreased effect due to lowered stability, whereas variant rs757660, a high prevalence mutant, showed a similar phenotype to the wild-type. Lay summary Until the year 2015, consistent replication of patient-derived isolates of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in an in vitro model remained a limitation in HCV research. In 2015 a group of authors identified a protein named SEC14L2 that enabled the replication of HCV isolates in cell culture. We performed a large screen encompassing 73 isolates of 4 different HCV genotypes. Additionally, we replaced the natural SEC14L2 with 13 different mutants to test if the protein variation significantly altered its HCV replication enhancing functions. We showed that different genotypes of HCV react differently to the presence of this protein and the variants of the protein mimic the behavior of the wild-type.

Details

ISSN :
16000641
Volume :
70
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of hepatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e0d95e917d7adbbf59cf1bffdf0040b2