Author:
Cortese Maria Francesca,González Carolina,Gregori Josep,Casillas Rosario,Carioti Luca,Guerrero-Murillo Mercedes,Riveiro-Barciela Mar,Godoy Cristina,Sopena Sara,Yll Marçal,Quer Josep,Rando Ariadna,Lopez-Martinez Rosa,Pacín Ruiz Beatriz,García-García Selene,Esteban-Mur Rafael,Tabernero David,Buti Maria,Rodríguez-Frías Francisco
Abstract
AbstractPatients with HBeAg-negative chronic infection (CI) have not been extensively studied because of low viremia. The HBx protein, encoded by HBX, has a key role in viral replication. Here, we analyzed the viral quasispecies at the 5′ end of HBX in CI patients and compared it with that of patients in other clinical stages. Fifty-eight HBeAg-negative patients were included: 16 CI, 19 chronic hepatitis B, 16 hepatocellular carcinoma and 6 liver cirrhosis. Quasispecies complexity and conservation were determined in the region between nucleotides 1255 and 1611. Amino acid changes detected were tested in vitro. CI patients showed higher complexity in terms of mutation frequency and nucleotide diversity and higher quasispecies conservation (p < 0.05). A genotype D-specific pattern of mutations (A12S/P33S/P46S/T36D-G) was identified in CI (median frequency, 81.7%), which determined a reduction in HBV DNA release of up to 1.5 log in vitro. CI patients showed a more complex and conserved viral quasispecies than the other groups. The genotype-specific pattern of mutations could partially explain the low viremia observed in these patients.
Funder
Institute of Health Carlos III
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
5 articles.
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