4.4 Article

Analysis of the in vitro replication phenotype of African hepatitis B virus (HBV) genotypes and subgenotypes present in Australia identifies marked differences in DNA and protein expression

Journal

VIROLOGY
Volume 540, Issue -, Pages 97-103

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2019.11.001

Keywords

HBV; African HBV; Genotype; Replication; Transfection

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Funding

  1. Roche Pillar Young Investigator grant
  2. Royal Melbourne Hospital Keir Research Fellowship [RF-003-2015]

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Hepatitis B virus infection in Africa is characterised by distinct genotypes with observed differences in natural history and clinical outcomes. Replication-competent cDNA clones of African genotypes were generated from patient-derived sequences identified in African children with chronic hepatitis B infection living in Australia: A1 (wild-type and basal core promotor (BCP) mutant), D2, D6, and E, comparing the replication phenotype to an established D3 cDNA clone in a transient transfection cell culture model. All clones replicated efficiently although less than the European D3 reference clone, and demonstrated marked differences in replication capacity, highest for subgenotypes A1 and D2. The BCP mutation increased the replication levels of the A1 subgenotype compared to wild-type. Intracellular and secreted surface antigen and HBeAg protein expression also varied across genotypes. We observed differences in functional activity in the upstream regulatory region across the genotypes that may contribute to the replication and protein differences observed.

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