Abstract

Great strides have been made in understanding and treating hepatitis C virus (HCV) thanks to the development of various experimental systems including cell-culture-proficient HCV, the HCV pseudoparticle system and soluble envelope glycoproteins. The HCV pseudoparticle (HCVpp) system is a platform used extensively in studies of cell entry, screening of novel entry inhibitors, assessing the phenotypes of clinically observed E1 and E2 glycoproteins and, most pertinently, in characterizing neutralizing antibody breadth induced upon vaccination and natural infection in patients. Nonetheless, some patient-derived clones produce pseudoparticles that are either non-infectious or exhibit infectivity too low for meaningful phenotyping. The mechanisms governing whether any particular clone produces infectious pseudoparticles are poorly understood. Here we show that endogenous expression of CD81, an HCV receptor and a cognate-binding partner of E2, in producer HEK 293T cells is detrimental to the infectivity of recovered HCVpp for most strains. Many HCVpp clones exhibited increased infectivity or had their infectivity rescued when they were produced in 293T cells CRISPR/Cas9 engineered to ablate CD81 expression (293TCD81KO). Clones made in 293TCD81KO cells were antigenically very similar to their matched counterparts made parental cells and appear to honour the accepted HCV entry pathway. Deletion of CD81 did not appreciably increase the recovered titres of soluble E2 (sE2). However, we did, unexpectedly, find that monomeric sE2 made in 293T cells and Freestyle 293-F (293-F) cells exhibit important differences. We found that 293-F-produced sE2 harbours mostly complex-type glycans whilst 293T-produced sE2 displays a heterogeneous mixture of both complex-type glycans and high-mannose or hybrid-type glycans. Moreover, sE2 produced in 293T cells is antigenically superior; exhibiting increased binding to conformational antibodies and the large extracellular loop of CD81. In summary, this work describes an optimal cell line for the production of HCVpp and reveals that sE2 made in 293T and 293-F cells are not antigenic equals. Our findings have implications for functional studies of E1E2 and the production of candidate immunogens.

Highlights

  • hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a significant human pathogen infecting more than 70 million people worldwide, of whom the majority are chronically infected

  • We show that while soluble E2 (sE2) molecules produced in 293TCD81KO and 293T cells are very similar, they are antigenically superior to that produced in Freestyle 293-F­ cells (293-­F); another 293-­derived cell line preferred for the large-­scale production of recombinant viral glycoproteins [31,32,33]

  • The HCV pseudoparticle system is a flexible platform for evaluating the phenotypes of clinical isolates and has proven to be a crucial tool for defining the sequence of virion and receptor interactions occurring during HCV entry; it is likely to be an important component for the assessment of future HCV vaccine candidates [13, 28, 29]

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Summary

Introduction

HCV is a significant human pathogen infecting more than 70 million people worldwide, of whom the majority are chronically infected. Transmission still continues unabated with incidence rates rising in North America as the majority of infected individuals are unaware of their status [1]. The high cost of treatment, the risk of reinfection following successful treatment and poor awareness of HCV status in high-r­ isk groups necessitate the development of a prophylactic vaccine [2].

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