1. Academic Validation
  2. Apolipoprotein B100 is required for hepatitis C infectivity and Mipomersen inhibits hepatitis C

Apolipoprotein B100 is required for hepatitis C infectivity and Mipomersen inhibits hepatitis C

  • World J Gastroenterol. 2016 Dec 7;22(45):9954-9965. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v22.i45.9954.
Esperance A K Schaefer 1 James Meixiong 1 Christina Mark 1 Amy Deik 1 Daniel L Motola 1 Dahlene Fusco 1 Andrew Yang 1 Cynthia Brisac 1 Shadi Salloum 1 Wenyu Lin 1 Clary B Clish 1 Lee F Peng 1 Raymond T Chung 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Esperance AK Schaefer, James Meixiong, Christina Mark, Daniel L Motola, Dahlene Fusco, Andrew Yang, Cynthia Brisac, Shadi Salloum, Wenyu Lin, Lee F Peng, Raymond T Chung, Gastrointestinal Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114, United States.
Abstract

Aim: To characterize the role of apolipoprotein B100 (apoB100) in hepatitis C viral (HCV) Infection.

Methods: In this study, we utilize a gene editing tool, transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs), to generate human hepatoma cells with a stable genetic deletion of APOB to assess of apoB in HCV. Using infectious cell culture-competent HCV, viral pseudoparticles, replicon models, and lipidomic analysis we determined the contribution of apoB to each step of the viral lifecycle. We further studied the effect of mipomersen, an FDA-approved antisense inhibitor of apoB100, on HCV using in vitro cell-culture competent HCV and determined its impact on viral infectivity with the TCID50 method.

Results: We found that apoB100 is indispensable for HCV Infection. Using the JFH-1 fully infectious cell-culture competent virus in Huh 7 hepatoma cells with TALEN-mediated gene deletion of apoB (APOB KO), we found a significant reduction in HCV RNA and protein levels following Infection. Pseudoparticle and replicon models demonstrated that apoB did not play a role in HCV entry or replication. However, the virus produced by APOB KO cells had significantly diminished infectivity as measured by the TCID-50 method compared to wild-type virus. Lipidomic analysis demonstrated that these virions have a fundamentally altered lipidome, with complete depletion of Cholesterol esters. We further demonstrate that inhibition of apoB using mipomersen, an FDA-approved anti-sense oligonucleotide, results in a potent anti-HCV effect and significantly reduces the infectivity of the virus.

Conclusion: ApoB is required for the generation of fully infectious HCV virions, and inhibition of apoB with mipomersen blocks HCV. Targeting lipid metabolic pathways to impair viral infectivity represents a novel host targeted strategy to inhibit HCV.

Keywords

Apolipoprotein; Gene silencing; Hepatitis C virus; Lipid; Viral replication.

Figures
Products