4.5 Article

Mechanism of HCV's resistance to IFN-α in cell culture involves expression of functional IFN-α receptor 1

Journal

VIROLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-8-351

Keywords

Hepatitis C virus (HCV); Interferon alpha (IFN-alpha); Interferon alpha-receptor 1 (IFNAR1); Jak-Stat signaling; nuclear translocation; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR); HCV infection; ER stress

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Funding

  1. NCI
  2. Gayer Foundation, New York
  3. NIH [CA127481, CA129776]
  4. Louisiana Cancer Research Consortium (LCRC)

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The mechanisms underlying the Hepatitis C virus (HCV) resistance to interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) are not fully understood. We used IFN-alpha resistant HCV replicon cell lines and an infectious HCV cell culture system to elucidate the mechanisms of IFN-alpha resistance in cell culture. The IFN-alpha resistance mechanism of the replicon cells were addressed by a complementation study that utilized the full-length plasmid clones of IFN-alpha receptor 1 (IFNAR1), IFN-alpha receptor 2 (IFNAR2), Jak1, Tyk2, Stat1, Stat2 and the ISRE-luciferase reporter plasmid. We demonstrated that the expression of the full-length IFNAR1 clone alone restored the defective Jak-Stat signaling as well as Stat1, Stat2 and Stat3 phosphorylation, nuclear translocation and antiviral response against HCV in all IFN-alpha resistant cell lines (R-15, R-17 and R-24) used in this study. Moreover RT-PCR, Southern blotting and DNA sequence analysis revealed that the cells from both R-15 and R-24 series of IFN-alpha resistant cells have 58 amino acid deletions in the extracellular sub domain 1 (SD1) of IFNAR1. In addition, cells from the R-17 series have 50 amino acids deletion in the sub domain 4 (SD4) of IFNAR1 protein leading to impaired activation of Tyk2 kinase. Using an infectious HCV cell culture model we show here that viral replication in the infected Huh-7 cells is relatively resistant to exogenous IFN-alpha. HCV infection itself induces defective Jak-Stat signaling and impairs Stat1 and Stat2 phosphorylation by down regulation of the cell surface expression of IFNAR1 through the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress mechanisms. The results of this study suggest that expression of cell surface IFNAR1 is critical for the response of HCV to exogenous IFN-alpha.

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