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Does Tyrosyl DNA Phosphodiesterase-2 Play a Role in Hepatitis B Virus Genome Repair?

Authors :
Ji A. Sohn
Felipe Cortes Ledesma
Keith W. Caldecott
Christoph Seeger
Rajeev K. Boregowda
Jianming Hu
Rebecca McAllister
Xiuji Cui
National Institutes of Health (US)
Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Genética
Source :
PLoS ONE, Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname, idUS. Depósito de Investigación de la Universidad de Sevilla, PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 6, p e0128401 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2015.

Abstract

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication and persistence are sustained by a nuclear episome, the covalently closed circular (CCC) DNA, which serves as the transcriptional template for all viral RNAs. CCC DNA is converted from a relaxed circular (RC) DNA in the virion early during infection as well as from RC DNA in intracellular progeny nucleocapsids via an intracellular amplification pathway. Current antiviral therapies suppress viral replication but cannot eliminate CCC DNA. Thus, persistence of CCC DNA remains an obstacle toward curing chronic HBV infection. Unfortunately, very little is known about how CCC DNA is formed. CCC DNA formation requires removal of the virally encoded reverse transcriptase (RT) protein from the 5' end of the minus strand of RC DNA. Tyrosyl DNA phosphodiesterase-2 (Tdp2) was recently identified as the enzyme responsible for cleavage of tyrosyl-5' DNA linkages formed between topoisomerase II and cellular DNA. Because the RT-DNA linkage is also a 5' DNA-phosphotyrosyl bond, it has been hypothesized that Tdp2 might be one of several elusive host factors required for CCC DNA formation. Therefore, we examined the role of Tdp2 in RC DNA deproteination and CCC DNA formation. We demonstrated Tdp2 can cleave the tyrosyl-minus strand DNA linkage using authentic HBV RC DNA isolated from nucleocapsids and using RT covalently linked to short minus strand DNA produced in vitro. On the other hand, our results showed that Tdp2 gene knockout did not block CCC DNA formation during HBV infection of permissive human hepatoma cells and did not prevent intracellular amplification of duck hepatitis B virus CCC DNA. These results indicate that although Tdp2 can remove the RT covalently linked to the 5' end of the HBV minus strand DNA in vitro, this protein might not be required for CCC DNA formation in vivo.<br />Funding for this work came from the National Institutes of Health, http://www.nih.gov, R01 AI074982 to JH, R21 AI101558 to CS, and T32 CA060395 to RM.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLOS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec87fc812468d3b8d7f8e5ca34eb5c2b