| Literature DB >> 19843348 |
Minerva Cervantes Gonzalez1, Rodolphe Suspène, Michel Henry, Denise Guétard, Simon Wain-Hobson, Jean-Pierre Vartanian.
Abstract
Retroviruses, hepadnaviruses, and some other retroelements are vulnerable to editing by single stranded DNA cytidine deaminases. Of the eleven human genes encoding such enzymes, eight have demonstrable enzymatic activity. Six of seven human APOBEC3 are able to hyperedit HBV DNA, frequently on both strands. Although human APOBEC1 (hA1) is not generally expressed in normal liver, hA1 can edit single stranded DNA in a variety of experimental assays. The possibility of ectopic expression of hA1 in vivo cannot be ruled out and interestingly, transgenic mice with A1 expressed under a liver specific promoter develop hepatocellular carcinoma. The impact of hA1 on HBV in tissue culture is varied with reports noting either reduced DNA synthesis or not, with cytidine deamination taking a low profile. We sought to examine the hA1 editing activity on replicating HBV. Using highly sensitive 3DPCR it was possible to show that hA1 edits the HBV minus DNA strand as efficiently as hA3G, considered the reference deaminase for HIV and HBV. The dinucleotide specificity of editing was unique among human cytidine deaminases providing a hallmark of use in a posteriori analyses of in vivo edited genomes. Analysis of sequences derived from the serum of two chronic carriers, indicated that hA1 explained only a small fraction of edited HBV genomes. By contrast, several human APOBEC3 deaminases were active including hA3G.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19843348 PMCID: PMC2770521 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-6-96
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Figure 1Human APOBEC1 can efficiently hyperedit HBV minus strand DNA. A) Western blotting of V5 tagged hA1, hA2 and hA3G cDNA constructs. Molecular weight markers (kDa) are given to the left. B) Reduction of HBV DNA production following cotransfection of QT6 cells with HBV ± hA1 ± hA3G. C) PCR and 3DPCR of HBV X region DNA from transfections. C-, no DNA control; C+, HBV alone; pv, plasmid vector control; hA1, V5-tagged human APOBEC1 expression plasmid; hA2, V5 tagged human APOBEC2; hA3G, V5-tagged human APOBEC3G as positive control. M, molecular weight markers. The sizes of the PCR and 3DPCR fragments are 314 and 213 bps. D) Frequency distribution of G->A hypermutants in terms of mutations per clone. E) Mutation matrices of 24 hA1 and hA3G hyperedited HBV sequences. The size of the locus is 167 bp. F) Dinucleotide analysis of hA1 and hA3G edited HBV genomes. A χ2 analysis showed that frequencies for hA1 and hA3G deviated significantly from the expected values as indicated by asterisks (p < 0.001).
Figure 2Single molecule analysis of hyperedited HBV DNA. Based on the macroscopic trends identified in Figure 1F, mutated dinucleotide frequencies were plotted for individual minus strand hyperedited sequences. The units are numbers of NpC edited sites per clone. A-C) Data from HBV co-transfections with hA1 and hA3G (24 sequences each). D-F) Patient data from two individuals with high viremia chronic hepatitis (#12763, 19 sequences, ~109 DNA copies/mL; #130.71, 21 sequences, ~3 109 DNA copies/mL). For A to F, a few data points overlap; hence the number of points is less than the number of sequences. The diagonals represent the expected values assuming no dinucleotide preference. As the base composition differs between the sequences of the two HBV strains, dinucleotide composition varies and the expected values accordingly.