| Literature DB >> 23056952 |
Garrick K Wilson1, Zania Stamataki.
Abstract
The study of a virus is made possible by the availability of culture systems in which the viral lifecycle can be realized. Such systems support robust virus entry, replication, assembly, and secretion of nascent virions. Furthermore, culture models provide a platform in which therapeutic interventions can be devised or monitored. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) has a restricted tropism to human and chimpanzees; thus investigations of HCV biology have been hindered for many years due to a lack of small animal models. Nevertheless, significant efforts have been directed at developing cell culture models to elucidate the viral lifecycle in vitro. HCV primarily infects liver parenchymal cells commonly known as hepatocytes. The liver is a highly specialized and complex organ and the development of in vitro systems that reflects this complexity has proven difficult. Consequently, host cell receptor molecules that potentiate HCV infection were identified over a decade after the virus was discovered. A summary of the various HCV in vitro culture models, their advantages, and disadvantages are described.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23056952 PMCID: PMC3465938 DOI: 10.1155/2012/292591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hepatol
Culture models to study the HCV lifecycle. Several hepatic models have been employed to study diverse aspects of the viral lifecycle. Models of nonhepatic origin have also been employed and proved useful in identifying potential extra hepatic sites of HCV infection in vivo. In addition, Caco2 cells were used to study the effects of polarity on HCV infection as most hepatic cell lines fail to polarize in culture. However, a perfect model that closely mimics the in vivo environment is still yet to be identified.
| Cell type | Tissue | HCV lifecycle | Reference | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immortalized cell lines | ||||
| Huh 6/Claudin-1 | Hepatoblastoma | Entry/replication | [ | Interferon resistance |
| Huh-7 | HCC | Full lifecycle | [ | Interferon response to infection |
| Huh-7.5 | HCC | Full lifecycle | [ | Defective RIG-I pathway |
| Hep3B | HCC | Entry | [ | Limited HCV replication |
| HepG2-CD81 | Hepatoblastoma | Entry/replication | [ | Forms hepatic polarity |
| PLC/PRF/5 | Primary liver carcinoma | Entry | [ | Low HCV replication |
| 293-T/Claudin-1 | Kidney | Entry/replication | [ | Non-hepatic origin |
| hCMEC/D3 | Brain endothelia | Entry/replication | [ | In vitro study of HCV neuropathology |
| HBMEC | Brain endothelia | Entry/replication | [ | In vitro study of HCV neuropathology |
| SK-N-MC | Neuroepithelioma | Entry | [ | Low virus replication |
| SK-PN-DW | Neuroepithelioma | Entry | [ | Low virus replication |
| Caco2 | Colorectal adenocarcinoma | Entry/replication | [ | Non-hepatic origin |
|
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| Primary cell culture | ||||
|
| ||||
| Primary hepatocytes | Human liver | Full lifecycle | [ | Limited access to liver tissue, physiologically relevant model |
| Fetal hepatocytes | Human liver | Entry/replication | [ | Limited access to liver tissue, antiviral response to infection |
| Chimpanzee hepatocytes | Chimp liver | Replication | [ | Limited availability |
| Stem cell derived hepatocytes | Human embryo | Full life cycle | [ | Highly differentiated, supports HCV life cycle |