Abstract

BackgroundHepatitis C virus (HCV) could induce chronic liver diseases and hepatocellular carcinoma in human. The use of primary human hepatocyte as a viral host is restrained with the scarcity of tissue supply. A culture model restricted to HCV genotype 2a (JFH-1) has been established using Huh7-derived hepatocyte. Other genotypes including the wild-type virus could not propagate in Huh7, Huh7.5 and Huh7.5.1 cells.MethodsFunctional hepatocyte-like cells (HLCs) were developed from normal human iPS cells as a host for HCV infection. Mature HLCs were identified for selective hepatocyte markers, CYP450s, HCV associated receptors and HCV essential host factors. HLCs were either transfected with JFH-1 HCV RNA or infected with HCV particles derived from patient serum. The enhancing effect of α-tocopherol and the inhibitory effects of INF-α, ribavirin and sofosbuvir to HCV infection were studied. The HCV viral load and HCV RNA were assayed for the infection efficiency.ResultsThe fully-developed HLCs expressed phase I, II, and III drug-metabolizing enzymes, HCV associated receptors (claudin-1, occludin, CD81, ApoE, ApoB, LDL-R) and HCV essential host factors (miR-122 and SEC14L2) comparable to the primary human hepatocyte. SEC14L2, an α-tocopherol transfer protein, was expressed in HLCs, but not in Huh7 cell, had been implicated in effective HCVser infection. The HLCs permitted not only the replication of HCV RNA, but also the production of HCV particles (HCVcc) released to the culture media. HLCs drove higher propagation of HCVcc derived from JFH-1 than did the classical host Huh7 cells. HLCs infected with either JFH-1 or wild-type HCV expressed HCV core antigen, NS5A, NS5B, NS3 and HCV negative-stand RNA. HLCs allowed entire HCV life cycle derived from either JFH-1, HCVcc or wild-type HCV (genotype 1a, 1b, 3a, 3b, 6f and 6n). Further increasing the HCVser infection in HLCs was achieved by incubating cell with α-tocopherol. The supernatant from infected HLCs could infect both naïve HLC and Huh7 cell. Treating infected HLC with INF-α and ribavirin decreased HCV RNA in both the cellular fraction and the culture medium. The HLCs reacted to HCVcc or wild-type HCV infection by upregulating TNF-α, IL-28B and IL-29.ConclusionsThis robust cell culture model for serum-derived HCV using HLCs as host cells provides a remarkable system for investigating HCV life cycle, HCV-associated hepatocellular carcinoma development and the screening for new anti HCV drugs.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12985-016-0519-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Hepatitis C virus (HCV) could induce chronic liver diseases and hepatocellular carcinoma in human

  • Our study demonstrated that hepatocyte-like cells (HLCs) could host HCV for at least 6 months while retaining the capability to allow a complete viral life cycle

  • Our study demonstrated that HLCs express phase I (CYP2B6, CYP2D6, CYP2C9 CYP2C19, CYP1A2 and CYP2E1), phase II drug-metabolizing enzyme (OATP2) and phase III drug transporters (MRP2) at levels comparable to those of primary human hepatocytes, but higher than HepaRG, the hepatocellular carcinoma cell line frequently used in pharmaceutical industry

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) could induce chronic liver diseases and hepatocellular carcinoma in human. The use of primary human hepatocyte as a viral host is restrained with the scarcity of tissue supply. A culture model restricted to HCV genotype 2a (JFH-1) has been established using Huh7-derived hepatocyte. Human primary hepatocytes should have served as ideal host cells for liver-targeting pathogens, e.g., malarial parasite, hepatitis B, hepatitis C and dengue viruses. The shortcoming in the procurement of these cells and their limited life span have limited the study of host-pathogen relationships and their sequential developments, e.g., xenobiotic screening, and biotransformation. A cellular substitute that closely mimics primary hepatocyte but circumvents these shortcoming would greatly extend our understanding of host-pathogen interactions and the corresponding treatment strategies. Chronic HCV infection led to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma [3]. The development of suitable culture models for HCV is critical for designing efficacious anti-HCV strategies

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