Abstract

ABSTRACTMany DNA tumor viruses promote cellular transformation by inactivating the critically important tumor suppressor protein p53. In contrast, it is not known whether p53 function is disrupted by hepatitis C virus (HCV), a unique, oncogenic RNA virus that is the leading infectious cause of liver cancer in many regions of the world. Here we show that HCV-permissive, liver-derived HepG2 cells engineered to constitutively express microRNA-122 (HepG2/miR-122 cells) have normal p53-mediated responses to DNA damage and that HCV replication in these cells potently suppresses p53 responses to etoposide, an inducer of DNA damage, or nutlin-3, an inhibitor of p53 degradation pathways. Upregulation of p53-dependent targets is consequently repressed within HCV-infected cells, with potential consequences for cell survival. Despite this, p53 function is not disrupted by overexpression of the complete HCV polyprotein, suggesting that altered p53 function may result from the host response to viral RNA replication intermediates. Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)/Cas9-mediated ablation of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-activated protein kinase R (PKR) restored p53 responses while boosting HCV replication, showing that p53 inhibition results directly from viral activation of PKR. The hepatocellular abundance of phosphorylated PKR is elevated in HCV-infected chimpanzees, suggesting that PKR activation and consequent p53 inhibition accompany HCV infection in vivo. These findings reveal a feature of the host response to HCV infection that may contribute to hepatocellular carcinogenesis.

Highlights

  • Many DNA tumor viruses promote cellular transformation by inactivating the critically important tumor suppressor protein p53

  • We find that loss of p53 function results from activation of the double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase R (PKR) by replicating hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA

  • The experiments that we describe here demonstrate that activation of the p53 tumor suppressor pathway by DNA damage is impaired in cells infected with HCV

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Summary

Introduction

Many DNA tumor viruses promote cellular transformation by inactivating the critically important tumor suppressor protein p53 It is not known whether p53 function is disrupted by hepatitis C virus (HCV), a unique, oncogenic RNA virus that is the leading infectious cause of liver cancer in many regions of the world. P53 inhibition is mediated by cellular protein kinase R (PKR), which is activated by HCV RNA replication and subsequently suppresses global protein synthesis These results redefine our understanding of how HCV infection influences p53 function. Virus replication levels are low, and detection of infected cells requires sensitive reporter genes [14] These technical obstacles represent a hindrance to the study of the impact of HCV infection on p53 responses in primary hepatocytes

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