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miRNA independent hepacivirus variants suggest a strong evolutionary pressure to maintain miR-122 dependence

Authors :
Yu, Y.
Scheel, T. K. H.
Luna, J. M.
Chung, H.
Nishiuchi, E.
Scull, M. A.
Echeverría Chagas, Natalia
Ricardo-Lax, I.
Kapoor, A.
Lipkin, I. W.
Divers, T. J.
Antczak, D. F.
Tennant, B. C.
Rice, C. M.
Yu Y.
Scheel T.K.H.
Luna J.M.
Chung H.
Nishiuchi E.
Scull M.A.
Echeverría Chagas Natalia, Universidad de la República (Uruguay). Facultad de Ciencias. Centro de Investigaciones Nucleares
Ricardo-Lax I.
Kapoor A.
Lipkin I.W.
Divers T.J.
Antczak D.F.
Tennant B.C.
Rice C.M.
Source :
COLIBRI, Universidad de la República, instacron:Universidad de la República
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
PLoS, 2017.

Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) requires the liver specific micro-RNA (miRNA), miR-122, to replicate. This was considered unique among RNA viruses until recent discoveries of HCV-related hepaciviruses prompting the question of a more general miR-122 dependence. Among hepaciviruses, the closest known HCV relative is the equine non-primate hepacivirus (NPHV). Here, we used Argonaute cross-linking immunoprecipitation (AGO-CLIP) to confirm AGO binding to the single predicted miR-122 site in the NPHV 5’UTR in vivo. To study miR-122 requirements in the absence of NPHV-permissive cell culture systems, we generated infectious NPHV/HCV chimeric viruses with the 5’ end of NPHV replacing orthologous HCV sequences. These chimeras were viable even in cells lacking miR-122, although miR-122 presence enhanced virus production. No other miRNAs bound this region. By random mutagenesis, we isolated HCV variants partially dependent on miR-122 as well as robustly replicating NPHV/HCV variants completely independent of any miRNAs. These miRNA independent variants even replicate and produce infectious particles in non-hepatic cells after exogenous delivery of apolipoprotein E (ApoE). Our findings suggest that miR-122 independent HCV and NPHV variants have arisen and been sampled during evolution, yet miR-122 dependence has prevailed. We propose that hepaciviruses may use this mechanism to guarantee liver tropism and exploit the tolerogenic liver environment to avoid clearance and promote chronicity.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
COLIBRI, Universidad de la República, instacron:Universidad de la República
Accession number :
edsair.od......3056..89f20c648be52be07a94d213acfac49c