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Modified apoptotic molecule (BID) reduces hepatitis C virus infection in mice with chimeric human livers

Authors :
Jürgen Ruland
Norman M. Kneteman
Masami Hirota-Tsuchihara
Jingyu Diao
D. Lorne Tyrrell
Cathy Iorio
Giovanni Migliaccio
Farida Sarangi
Christopher D. Richardson
Eric Hsu
Belinda Hsi
Source :
Nature Biotechnology. 21:519-525
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2003.

Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) encodes a polyprotein consisting of core, envelope (E1, E2, p7), and nonstructural polypeptides (NS2, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, NS5B). The serine protease (NS3/NS4A), helicase (NS3), and polymerase (NS5B) constitute valid targets for antiviral therapy. We engineered BH3 interacting domain death agonist (BID), an apoptosis-inducing molecule, to contain a specific cleavage site recognized by the NS3/NS4A protease. Cleavage of the BID precursor molecule by the viral protease activated downstream apoptotic molecules of the mitochondrial pathway and triggered cell death. We extended this concept to cells transfected with an infectious HCV genome, hepatocytes containing HCV replicons, a Sindbis virus model for HCV, and finally HCV-infected mice with chimeric human livers. Infected mice injected with an adenovirus vector expressing modified BID exhibited HCV-dependent apoptosis in the human liver xenograft and considerable declines in serum HCV titers.

Details

ISSN :
15461696 and 10870156
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Biotechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eec9501d5064ca1bc2d393e94ab4ec8a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt817