| Literature DB >> 21466709 |
Usman Ali Ashfaq1, Shaheen N Khan, Zafar Nawaz, Sheikh Riazuddin.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of chronic liver diseases including steatosis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Currently, there is no vaccine available for prevention of HCV infection due to high degree of strain variation. The current treatment of care, Pegylated interferon α in combination with ribavirin is costly, has significant side effects and fails to cure about half of all infections. The development of in-vitro models such as HCV infection system, HCV sub-genomic replicon, HCV producing pseudoparticles (HCVpp) and infectious HCV virion provide an important tool to develop new antiviral drugs of different targets against HCV. These models also play an important role to study virus lifecycle such as virus entry, endocytosis, replication, release and HCV induced pathogenesis. This review summarizes the most important in-vitro models currently used to study future HCV research as well as drug design.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21466709 PMCID: PMC3083322 DOI: 10.1186/1479-0556-9-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Vaccines Ther ISSN: 1479-0556
Figure 1Proteins encoded by the HCV genome. HCV is formed by an enveloped particle harbouring a plus-strand RNA of ~9.6 kb. The genome carries a long openreading frame (ORF) encoding a polyprotein precursor of 3010 amino acids. Translation of the HCV ORF is directed via a 340 nucleotide long 5' nontranslated region (NTR) functioning as an internal ribosome entry site; it permits the direct binding of ribosomes in close proximity to the start codon of the ORF. The HCV polyprotein is cleaved co- and post-translationally by cellular and viral proteases into ten different products, with the structural proteins (core (C), E1 and E2) located in the N-terminal third and the nonstructural (NS2-5) replicative proteins in the remainder. Putative functions of the cleavage products are shown [4]
Figure 2The HCV subgenomic replicon system.
Figure 3Scheme of HCVpp production and infection. HEK-293T cells were transfected with CMV-Gag-Pol, Luciferase vector and HCV GP expression constructs. Successfully transfected 293T cells assemble HCVpp intracellularly and secrete them into the supernatant. The HCVpp-containing supernatant can be harvested. The supernatant can then either be used unmodified or conditioned (centrifugation, drug treatement etc.) to infect target cells. HCVpp attach to the target cells, become endocytosed and fuse with the endocytic membranes to release the retroviral core containing the luciferase vector into the cytoplasm. The Luciferase vector is then reverse transcribed and integrated into the host-cell genome. 24 to 96 hours after infection, transgene expression can be analyzed.