Abstract

Approximately 4 million Americans are infected with the hepatitis C virus (HCV), making it a major cause of chronic liver disease. Because of the lack of an efficient cell culture system, little is known about the interaction between HCV and host cells. We performed a yeast two-hybrid screen of a human liver cell cDNA library with HCV core protein as bait and isolated the DEAD box protein DBX. DBX has significant amino acid sequence identity to mouse PL10, an ATP-dependent RNA helicase. The binding of DBX to HCV core protein occurred in an in vitro binding assay in the presence of 1 M NaCl or detergent. When expressed in mammalian cells, HCV core protein and DBX were co-localized at the endoplasmic reticulum. In a mutant strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, DBX complemented the function of Ded1p, an essential DEAD box RNA helicase. HCV core protein inhibited the growth of DBX-complemented mutant yeast but not Ded1p-expressing yeast. HCV core protein also inhibited the in vitro translation of capped but not uncapped RNA. These findings demonstrate an interaction between HCV core protein and a host cell protein involved in RNA translation and suggest a mechanism by which HCV may inhibit host cell mRNA translation.

Highlights

  • Hepatitis C virus (HCV)1 was discovered by cDNA cloning in 1989 and shown to cause chronic liver disease (1, 2)

  • HCV core protein binds to the human DEAD box protein DBX

  • DBX rescues the lethal phenotype of ded1-deletion, demonstrating that it can function as a RNA helicase for capped mRNA, replacing the essential yeast DEAD box RNA helicase Ded1p

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis C virus (HCV)1 was discovered by cDNA cloning in 1989 and shown to cause chronic liver disease (1, 2). HCV Core Protein-DBX Interaction and applications available via the internet at the National Center for Biotechnology Information World Wide Web site.2 In Vitro Binding Assays—A PCR product encoding the cytoplasmic domain of HCV core protein (amino acids 1–123) was cloned into pBFT4 for in vitro transcription-translation (21).

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