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HDV can constrain HBV genetic evolution in hbsag: Implications for the identification of innovative pharmacological targets

Authors :
A. Battisti
Alberto Spanò
G. Stornaiuolo
L. Colagrossi
Francesca Ceccherini-Silberstein
Ada Bertoli
Ilaria Lenci
Carmine Minichini
Rossana Scutari
A. Barlattani
Valentina Svicher
T. Mari
Vincenzo Malagnino
Maria De Cristofaro
Lavinia Fabeni
Nicola Coppola
Giuseppina Cappiello
Carlo Federico Perno
Massimo Marignani
Pascale Trimoulet
Alfonso Galeota Lanza
Romina Salpini
L. Carioti
Hervé Fleury
L. Piermatteo
Massimo Andreoni
Mario Angelico
N. Iapadre
Loredana Sarmati
E. Nebuloso
Maria Stanzione
Giuseppe Maria De Sanctis
Miriam Lichtner
Caterina Pasquazzi
Claudio Maria Mastroianni
Colagrossi, L
Salpini, R
Scutari, R
Carioti, L
Battisti, A
Piermatteo, L
Bertoli, A
Fabeni, L
Minichini, C
Trimoulet, P
Fleury, H
Nebuloso, E
De Cristofaro, M
Cappiello, G
Spano', Antonio
Malagnino, V
Mari, T
Barlattani, A
Iapadre, N
Lichtner, M
Mastroianni, C
Lenci, I
Pasquazzi, C
De Sanctis, Gm
Galeota Lanza, A
Stanzione, M
Stornaiuolo, G
Marignani, M
Sarmati, L
Andreoni, M
Angelico, M
Ceccherini-Silberstein, F
Perno, Cf
Coppola, N
Svicher, V.
Source :
Viruses, Volume 10, Issue 7, Viruses, Vol 10, Iss 7, p 363 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Chronic HBV + HDV infection is associated with greater risk of liver fibrosis, earlier hepatic decompensation, and liver cirrhosis hepatocellular carcinoma compared to HBV mono-infection. However, to-date no direct anti-HDV drugs are available in clinical practice. Here, we identified conserved and variable regions in HBsAg and HDAg domains in HBV + HDV infection, a critical finding for the design of innovative therapeutic agents. The extent of amino-acid variability was measured by Shannon-Entropy (Sn) in HBsAg genotype-d sequences from 31 HBV + HDV infected and 62 HBV mono-infected patients (comparable for demographics and virological-parameters), and in 47 HDAg genotype-1 sequences. Positions with Sn = 0 were defined as conserved. The percentage of conserved HBsAg-positions was significantly higher in HBV + HDV infection than HBV mono-infection (p = 0.001). Results were confirmed after stratification for HBeAg-status and patients&rsquo<br />age. A Sn = 0 at specific positions in the C-terminus HBsAg were correlated with higher HDV-RNA, suggesting that conservation of these positions can preserve HDV-fitness. Conversely, HDAg was characterized by a lower percentage of conserved-residues than HBsAg (p &lt<br />0.001), indicating higher functional plasticity. Furthermore, specific HDAg-mutations were significantly correlated with higher HDV-RNA, suggesting a role in conferring HDV replicative-advantage. Among HDAg-domains, only the virus-assembly signal exhibited a high genetic conservation (75% of conserved-residues). In conclusion, HDV can constrain HBsAg genetic evolution to preserve its fitness. The identification of conserved regions in HDAg poses the basis for designing innovative targets against HDV-infection.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Viruses, Volume 10, Issue 7, Viruses, Vol 10, Iss 7, p 363 (2018)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f7755b30df13d067d57b457a9a97cf3