4.8 Article

Hepatitis C virus selectively perturbs the distal cholesterol synthesis pathway in a genotype-specific manner

Journal

HEPATOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 1, Pages 49-56

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hep.25631

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Duke Clinical Research Institute
  2. Richard Boebel Family Fund
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [APP1017139, APP567057]
  4. Gastroenterological Society of Australia
  5. Royal Australian College of Physicians
  6. American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases/LIFER Clinical and Translational Research Fellowship in Liver Diseases Award
  7. Kirby Institute for Infection and Immunity in Society
  8. Merck
  9. Vertex
  10. Bristol-Myers Squibb
  11. GlaxoSmithKline
  12. Scynexis
  13. Gilead
  14. Pfizer
  15. Abbott

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Hepatitis C virus (HCV) subverts host cholesterol metabolism for key processes in its lifecycle. How this interference results in the frequently observed, genotype-dependent clinical sequelae of hypocholesterolemia, hepatic steatosis, and insulin resistance (IR) remains incompletely understood. Hypocholesterolemia typically resolves after sustained viral response (SVR), implicating viral interference in host lipid metabolism. Using a targeted cholesterol metabolomic platform we evaluated paired HCV genotype 2 (G2) and G3 patient sera for changes in in vivo HCV sterol pathway metabolites. We compared HCV genotypic differences in baseline metabolites and following antiviral treatment to assess whether sterol perturbation resolved after HCV eradication. We linked these metabolites to IR and urine oxidative stress markers. In paired sera from HCV G2 (n = 13) and G3 (n = 20) patients, baseline sterol levels were lower in G3 than G2 for distal metabolites (7-dehyrocholesterol (7DHC) 0.017 versus 0.023 mg/dL; Padj = 0.0524, cholesterol 140.9 versus 178.7 mg/dL; Padj = 0.0242) but not the proximal metabolite lanosterol. In HCV G3, SVR resulted in increased levels of distal metabolites (cholesterol [?55.2 mg/dL; Padj = 0.0015], 7DHC [?0.0075 mg/dL; Padj = 0.0026], lathosterol [?0.0430 mg/dL Padj = 0.0405]). In contrast, lanosterol was unchanged after SVR (P = 0.9515). Conclusion: HCV G3, but not G2, selectively interferes with the late cholesterol synthesis pathway, evidenced by lower distal sterol metabolites and preserved lanosterol levels. This distal interference resolves with SVR. Normal lanosterol levels provide a signal for the continued proteolysis of 3-hydroxyl-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase, which may undermine other host responses to increase cholesterol synthesis. These data may provide a hypothesis to explain why hypocholesterolemia persists in chronic HCV infection, particularly in HCV G3, and is not overcome by host cholesterol compensatory mechanisms. (HEPATOLOGY 2012;56:4956)

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