4.6 Article

IFITM3 Interacts with the HBV/HDV Receptor NTCP and Modulates Virus Entry and Infection

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14040727

Keywords

HBV; HDV; infection; NTCP; IFITM3; virus entry; entry inhibitor; protein-protein interaction; bile acid transport; preS1 peptide

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [SFB 1021, 197785619, B8, A1, GL595/9-1, GRK2581, P10]
  2. German Center for Infection Research (DZIF)
  3. partner site Giessen-Marburg-Langen
  4. TTU Emerging Infections
  5. TTU Hepatitis
  6. State of Hesse (LOEWE Center DRUID) [C5, B2]
  7. German Ministry of Health via the Robert Koch Institute, Berlin

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This study identified IFITM3 as a novel protein-protein interaction partner of NTCP, which significantly affects the infection of HBV and HDV in hepatoma cells and primary human hepatocytes expressing NTCP. However, the specific mechanism by which this interaction facilitates the infection process remains unknown.
The Na+/taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide (NTCP, gene symbol SLC10A1) is both a physiological bile acid transporter and the high-affinity hepatic receptor for the hepatitis B and D viruses (HBV/HDV). Virus entry via endocytosis of the virus/NTCP complex involves co-factors, but this process is not fully understood. As part of the innate immunity, interferon-induced transmembrane proteins (IFITM) 1-3 have been characterized as virus entry-restricting factors for many viruses. The present study identified IFITM3 as a novel protein-protein interaction (PPI) partner of NTCP based on membrane yeast-two hybrid and co-immunoprecipitation experiments. Surprisingly, IFITM3 knockdown significantly reduced in vitro HBV infection rates of NTCP-expressing HuH7 cells and primary human hepatocytes (PHHs). In addition, HuH7-NTCP cells showed significantly lower HDV infection rates, whereas infection with influenza A virus was increased. HBV-derived myr-preS1 peptide binding to HuH7-NTCP cells was intact even under IFITM3 knockdown, suggesting that IFITM3-mediated HBV/HDV infection enhancement occurs in a step subsequent to the viral attachment to NTCP. In conclusion, IFITM3 was identified as a novel NTCP co-factor that significantly affects in vitro infection with HBV and HDV in NTCP-expressing hepatoma cells and PHHs. While there is clear evidence for a direct PPI between IFITM3 and NTCP, the specific mechanism by which this PPI facilitates the infection process remains to be identified in future studies.

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