Affiliation:
1. Fox Chase Cancer Center, 333 Cottman Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19111-2497
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) genome replication requires the virus-encoded small delta protein (δAg). During replication, nucleotide sequence changes accumulate on the HDV RNA, leading to the translation of δAg species that are nonfunctional or even inhibitory. A replication system was devised where all δAg was conditionally provided from a separate and unchanging source. A line of human embryonic kidney cells was stably transfected with a single copy of cDNA encoding small δAg, with expression under tetracycline (TET) control. Next, HDV genome replication was initiated in these cells by transfection with a mutated RNA unable to express δAg. Thus, replication of this RNA was under control of the TET-inducible δAg. In the absence of TET, there was sufficient δAg to allow a low level of HDV replication that could be maintained for at least 1 year. When TET was added, both δAg and genomic RNA increased dramatically within 2 days. With clones of such cells, designated 293-HDV, the burst of HDV RNA replication interfered with cell cycling. Within 2 days, there was a fivefold enhancement of G
1
/G
0
cells relative to both S and G
2
/M cells, and by 6 days, there was extensive cell detachment and death. These findings and those of other studies that are under way demonstrate the potential applications of this experimental system.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
50 articles.
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