4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Analysis of sequence configurations of the ISDR, PKR-binding domain, and V3 region as predictors of response to induction interferon-α and ribavirin therapy in chronic hepatitis C infection

Journal

DIGESTIVE DISEASES AND SCIENCES
Volume 47, Issue 6, Pages 1195-1205

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1023/A:1015349924116

Keywords

interferon sensitivity determining region (ISDR); PKR binding domain; V3 region; PKR-eIF-2 alpha; phosphorylation homology domain

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Interferon (IFN) and ribavirin combination therapy for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection yields a sustained response rate of only similar to40%. Previous studies have linked IFN responsiveness to viral sequence variation in parts of the E2 and NS5A genes, but this remains controversial. We studied pretreatment sera from 28 subjects (23 with HCV genotype 1a) who received high-dose IFN induction followed by IFN-ribavirin combination therapy. Serum HCV sequences were amplified and compared from 14 responders with undetectable HCV RNA 24 weeks after therapy and 11 nonresponders (excluding three who dropped out of the study). Analysis included the E2 PKR eIF-2alpha phosphorylation homology domain (PePHD, codons 659-670), where the sequence was well conserved, and codons 2001-2420 of NS5A. In NS5A, the proposed PKR binding domain (codons 2209-2274), containing the putative IFN sensitivity determining region (ISDR, codons 2209-2248), showed too little variation among subjects to differentiate responders and nonresponders. NS5A codons 2356-2385 (which includes the V3 region) exhibited more variation. Here, six of 12 genotype 1a responders showed four or more amino acid changes from the prototype HCV-1 sequence, as compared with one of eight nonresponders, but this fell short of statistical significance (P = 0.16). NS5A sequences from posttreatment sera were examined in six nonresponders to look for selection of treatment-resistant viral subpopulations, but no consistent change was detected. In conclusion, our results indicate that the sequences of the ISDR, the PKR-binding domain, and the PePHD are unlikely to have predictive value for IFN treatment success in those infected with HCV genotype 1a. However, the finding of greater variability among treatment responders in the carboxy end of NS5A suggests that the V3 region merits further investigation.

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