Bile Goes Viral

Author:

Tenge Victoria R.ORCID,Murakami Kosuke,Salmen WilhelmORCID,Lin Shih-ChingORCID,Crawford Sue E.ORCID,Neill Frederick H.,Prasad B. V. Venkataram,Atmar Robert L.,Estes Mary K.

Abstract

Laboratory cultivation of viruses is critical for determining requirements for viral replication, developing detection methods, identifying drug targets, and developing antivirals. Several viruses have a history of recalcitrance towards robust replication in laboratory cell lines, including human noroviruses and hepatitis B and C viruses. These viruses have tropism for tissue components of the enterohepatic circulation system: the intestine and liver, respectively. The purpose of this review is to discuss how key enterohepatic signaling molecules, bile acids (BAs), and BA receptors are involved in the replication of these viruses and how manipulation of these factors was useful in the development and/or optimization of culture systems for these viruses. BAs have replication-promoting activities through several key mechanisms: (1) affecting cellular uptake, membrane lipid composition, and endocytic acidification; (2) directly interacting with viral capsids to influence binding to cells; and (3) modulating the innate immune response. Additionally, expression of the Na+-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide BA receptor in continuous liver cell lines is critical for hepatitis B virus entry and robust replication in laboratory culture. Viruses are capable of hijacking normal cellular functions, and understanding the role of BAs and BA receptors, components of the enterohepatic system, is valuable for expanding our knowledge on the mechanisms of norovirus and hepatitis B and C virus replication.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Gulf coast consortia, TIPS program

Welch Foundation

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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