Functional involvement of endothelial lipase in hepatitis B virus infection

Author:

Shirasaki Takayoshi1,Murai Kazuhisa1,Ishida Atsuya1,Kuroki Kazuyuki2,Kawaguchi Kazunori2,Wang Ying1,Yamanaka Souma1,Yasukawa Rio1,Kawasaki Narumi1,Li Ying-Yi2,Shimakami Tetsuro2,Sumiyadorj Ariunaa2,Nio Kouki2,Sugimoto Saiho2,Orita Noriaki2,Takayama Hideo2,Okada Hikari2,Thi Bich Phuong Doan2,Iwabuchi Sadahiro3,Hashimoto Shinichi3,Ide Mayuko4,Tabata Noriko4,Ito Satoru4,Matsushima Kouji5,Yanagawa Hiroshi4,Yamashita Taro2,Kaneko Shuichi2,Honda Masao12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, Kanazawa University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kanazawa, Japan

2. Department of Gastroenterology, Kanazawa University Graduate School of Medicine, Kanazawa, Japan

3. Department of Molecular Pathophysiology, Institute of Advanced Medicine, Wakayama Medical University, Wakayama, Japan

4. Purotech Bio Inc., Kanagawa, Japan

5. Division of Molecular Regulation of Inflammatory and Immune Diseases, Research Institute for Biomedical Sciences, Tokyo University of Science, Chiba, Japan

Abstract

Background: HBV infection causes chronic liver disease and leads to the development of HCC. To identify host factors that support the HBV life cycle, we previously established the HC1 cell line that maintains HBV infection and identified host genes required for HBV persistence. Methods: The present study focused on endothelial lipase (LIPG), which binds to heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) in the cell membrane. Results: We found HBV infection was impaired in humanized liver chimeric mouse-derived hepatocytes that were transduced with lentivirus expressing short hairpin RNA against LIPG. Long-term suppression of LIPG combined with entecavir further suppressed HBV replication. LIPG was shown to be involved in HBV attachment to the cell surface by using 2 sodium taurocholate cotransporting peptide (NTCP)-expressing cell lines, and the direct interaction of LIPG and HBV large surface protein was revealed. Heparin and heparinase almost completely suppressed the LIPG-induced increase of HBV attachment, indicating that LIPG accelerated HBV attachment to HSPGs followed by HBV entry through NTCP. Surprisingly, the attachment of a fluorescently labeled NTCP-binding preS1 probe to NTCP-expressing cells was not impaired by heparin, suggesting the HSPG-independent attachment of the preS1 probe to NTCP. Interestingly, attachment of the preS1 probe was severely impaired in LIPG knockdown or knockout cells. Inhibitors of the lipase activity of LIPG similarly impaired the attachment of the preS1 probe to NTCP-expressing cells. Conclusions: LIPG participates in HBV infection by upregulating HBV attachment to the cell membrane by means of 2 possible mechanisms: increasing HBV attachment to HSPGs or facilitating HSPG-dependent or HSPG-independent HBV attachment to NTCP by its lipase activity.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Hepatology

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