4.6 Article

Hypervariable Region 1 Differentially Impacts Viability of Hepatitis C Virus Strains of Genotypes 1 to 6 and Impairs Virus Neutralization

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 85, Issue 5, Pages 2224-2234

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01594-10

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Funding

  1. Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen
  2. Lundbeck Foundation
  3. The Danish Cancer Society
  4. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  5. The Danish Medical Research Council
  6. A. P. Moeller and the Chastine Mc-Kinney Moeller Foundation
  7. Leo Nielsen and Karen Margrethe Nielsen Foundation
  8. Copenhagen University Hospital, Hvidovre, Denmark
  9. Ghent University [01G00507]
  10. Belgian State via the Interuniversity Attraction Poles Program [P6/36-HEPRO]
  11. The Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO-Vlaanderen) [31500910]

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Hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) of hepatitis C virus (HCV) E2 envelope glycoprotein has been implicated in virus neutralization and persistence. We deleted HVR1 from JFH1-based HCV recombinants expressing Core/E1/E2/p7/NS2 of genotypes 1 to 6, previously found to grow efficiently in human hepatoma Huh7.5 cells. The 2a(Delta HVR1), 5a(Delta HVR1), and 6a(Delta HVR1) Core-NS2 recombinants retained viability in Huh7.5 cells, whereas 1a(Delta HVR1), 1b(Delta HVR1), 2b(Delta HVR1), 3a(Delta HVR1), and 4a(Delta HVR1) recombinants were severely attenuated. However, except for recombinant 4a(Delta HVR1), viruses eventually spread, and reverse genetics studies revealed adaptive envelope mutations that rescued the infectivity of 1a(Delta HVR1), 1b(Delta HVR1), 2b(Delta HVR1), and 3a(Delta HVR1) recombinants. Thus, HVR1 might have distinct functional roles for different HCV isolates. Ultracentrifugation studies showed that deletion of HVR1 did not alter HCV RNA density distribution, whereas infectious particle density changed from a range of 1.0 to 1.1 g/ml to a single peak at similar to 1.1 g/ml, suggesting that HVR1 was critical for low-density HCV particle infectivity. Using chronic-phase HCV patient sera, we found three distinct neutralization profiles for the original viruses with these genotypes. In contrast, all HVR1-deleted viruses were highly sensitive with similar neutralization profiles. In vivo relevance for the role of HVR1 in protecting HCV from neutralization was demonstrated by ex vivo neutralization of 2a and 2a(Delta HVR1) produced in human liver chimeric mice. Due to the high density and neutralization susceptibility of HVR1-deleted viruses, we investigated whether a correlation existed between density and neutralization susceptibility for the original viruses with genotypes 1 to 6. Only the 2a virus displayed such a correlation. Our findings indicate that HVR1 of HCV shields important conserved neutralization epitopes with implications for viral persistence, immunotherapy, and vaccine development.

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