| Literature DB >> 21331286 |
Francisco C A Mello1, Nora Martel, Selma A Gomes, Natalia M Araujo.
Abstract
Small hepatitis B virus surface protein (S-HBsAg) variant Y100C has been associated with HBsAg-negative phenotype. To determine whether Y100C substitution yields impaired HBsAg or small amounts of HBsAg that may reduce HBsAg detection by commercial anti-HBsAg antibodies, two eukaryotic expression plasmids, one containing a wild-type S and the other an S gene from a Y100C variant, were constructed and their levels of HBsAg compared by ELISA after transfection of HuH7 cells. Unexpectedly, the extracellular HBsAg levels detected with Y100C plasmid were higher than those observed with the wild-type plasmid, but without statistical significance. We concluded that the Y100C substitution alone did not play a role in reducing HBsAg amounts or HBsAg affinity by commercial ELISA assay. Further studies on in vitro replication fitness with the complete genome of HBV isolates displaying or not Y100C substitution may elucidate whether this mutation affects HBV replication and consequently HBsAg production.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21331286 PMCID: PMC3038563 DOI: 10.1155/2011/695859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepat Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1364
Figure 1Comparison of HBsAg sequences, deduced from recombinant plasmids representing a wild-type (pcDNA3-SA1) and a mutated (pcDNA3-Y100C) HBV with a consensus sequence of HBV subgenotype A1. Consensus was originated from an alignment of 100 HBV complete genome sequences from HBV subgenotype A1 available in GenBank.
Figure 2Detection of extracellular (upper columns) and intracellular (lower columns) levels of HBsAg by ELISA after transfection of HuH7 cells. Black columns: SA1; white columns: Y100C variant. 1, 2, 3: HBsAg levels obtained in each transfection assay.