| Literature DB >> 15542681 |
Petra Neddermann1, Manuela Quintavalle, Chiara Di Pietro, Angelica Clementi, Mauro Cerretani, Sergio Altamura, Linda Bartholomew, Raffaele De Francesco.
Abstract
Efficient replication of hepatitis C virus (HCV) subgenomic RNA in cell culture requires the introduction of adaptive mutations. In this report we describe a system which enables efficient replication of the Con1 subgenomic replicon in Huh7 cells without the introduction of adaptive mutations. The starting hypothesis was that high amounts of the NS5A hyperphosphorylated form, p58, inhibit replication and that reduction of p58 by inhibition of specific kinase(s) below a certain threshold enables HCV replication. Upon screening of a panel of kinase inhibitors, we selected three compounds which inhibited NS5A phosphorylation in vitro and the formation of NS5A p58 in cell culture. Cells, transfected with the HCV Con1 wild-type sequence, support HCV RNA replication upon addition of any of the three compounds. The effect of the kinase inhibitors was found to be synergistic with coadaptive mutations in NS3. This is the first direct demonstration that the presence of high amounts of NS5A-p58 causes inhibition of HCV RNA replication in cell culture and that this inhibition can be relieved by kinase inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15542681 PMCID: PMC524975 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.23.13306-13314.2004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103