4.6 Article

A dual role for SAMHD1 in regulating HBV cccDNA and RT-dependent particle genesis

Journal

LIFE SCIENCE ALLIANCE
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

LIFE SCIENCE ALLIANCE LLC
DOI: 10.26508/lsa.201900355

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. EU 2020 Research and Innovation Programme Consortia HEP-CAR [667273]
  2. Wellcome Trust [IA 200838/Z/16/Z, IA 100954]
  3. MRC project [MR/R022011/1]
  4. Lister Institute Summer studentship
  5. MRC Career Development Fellowship [MR/P009085/1]
  6. Birmingham Fellowship - University of Birmingham
  7. UK Medical Research Council (MRC core funding of the MRC Human Immunology Unit)
  8. Wellcome Trust Infection and Immunology & Translational Medicine doctoral programme [105400/Z/14/Z]
  9. MRC/MHU [MC-UU-12009]
  10. John Fell Fund [123/737]
  11. WIMM Strategic Alliance [G0902418, MC_UU_12025]
  12. German Research Foundation via the collaborative research center [TRR179, TP14]
  13. Institute for Advanced Study
  14. Technical University of Munich via the German Excellence Initiative
  15. EU 7th Framework Program [291763]
  16. Wellcome Trust [105400/Z/14/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust
  17. BBSRC [BB/N008553/2, BB/N008553/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  18. MRC [G0400802, MR/R022011/1, G0801976, G1100247, MC_UU_00008/8, MR/P009085/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Chronic hepatitis B is one of the world's unconquered diseases with more than 240 million infected subjects at risk of developing liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma. Hepatitis B virus reverse transcribes pre-genomic RNA to relaxed circular DNA (rcDNA) that comprises the infectious particle. To establish infection of a naive target cell, the newly imported rcDNA is repaired by host enzymes to generate covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA), which forms the transcriptional template for viral replication. SAMHD1 is a component of the innate immune system that regulates deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate levels required for host and viral DNA synthesis. Here, we show a positive role for SAMHD1 in regulating cccDNA formation, where KO of SAMHD1 significantly reduces cccDNA levels that was reversed by expressing wild-type but not a mutated SAMHD1 lacking the nuclear localization signal. The limited pool of cccDNA in infected Samhd1 KO cells is transcriptionally active, and we observed a 10-fold increase in newly synthesized rcDNA-containing particles, demonstrating a dual role for SAMHD1 to both facilitate cccDNA genesis and to restrict reverse transcriptase-dependent particle genesis.

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