| Literature DB >> 24481244 |
Brook G Warner1, William G H Abbott, Allen G Rodrigo.
Abstract
HBeAg seroconversion is an important stage in the evolution of a chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection that usually leads to control of viral replication and a reduced risk for liver cirrhosis and cancer. Since current therapies for the HBV-associated liver inflammation that is known as chronic hepatitis B (CHB). Rarely induce permanent HBeAg seroconversion, there is a need to understand the mechanisms responsible for the purpose of identifying new therapeutic targets. Currently, the most widely accepted hypothesis is that the patient's humoral and cellular immune responses to the HBV initiate HBeAg seroconversion. Although we accept that this hypothesis cannot be excluded, we propose an alternative that is consistent with published data on HBeAg seroconversion. We postulate, as others have, that the HBeAg suppresses the immune response to the HBV. However, production of the HBeAg incurs a metabolic cost to the hepatocyte which reduces the replicative capacity of the virus. Consequently, HBeAg-negative viruses replicate faster than HBeAg-positive viruses. HBeAg-negative variants arise de novo; and when their frequency in the population is low they have a replicative advantage. However, they also benefit from the immunosuppressive effects of the HBeAg-positive viruses in the population. As HBeAg-negative variants increase in frequency and HBeAg levels fall, the immune system recognizes the HBV, and HBeAg seroconversion occurs as a consequence of frequency-dependent selection acting on HBeAg-negative variants. This hypothesis explains the wide inter-individual variation in age of seroconversion, the increased rate of seroconversion during anti-viral treatment and the phenomena of both spontaneous and post-treatment HBeAg reversions (in which patients cycle between the HBeAg-positive and negative phases of their infection).Entities:
Keywords: HBeAg; HBeAg seroconversion; frequency dependent selection; hepatitis B virus
Year: 2013 PMID: 24481244 PMCID: PMC4204619 DOI: 10.1093/emph/eot023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Med Public Health ISSN: 2050-6201
Figure 1.This figure demonstrates how frequency dependent selection and genetic drift control the percentage of viruses in serum that are HBeAg-negative mutants. The first panel shows the immune tolerant stage of the infection characterized initially by high levels of wild-type virus (thin straight line) and HBeAg (broken line) in the serum. The frequency of HBeAg-negative mutants is initially very low, but at some point starts to increase in frequency due to unknown mechanisms that favor their selection relative to wild-type viruses. As the frequency of HBeAg-mutant viruses increases, then the frequency of wild-type viruses falls, together with the level of serum HBeAg. When the level of HBeAg falls to a level that no longer suppresses the immune system, then viral replication will be suppressed and the level of serum and hepatic virions will decrease, and the patient will enter the inactive healthy carrier stage of the infection. A low HBV population size will also result in an increase in genetic drift. This is a random process, and in the third panel we are showing the outcome in which there is an increase in wild-type virions that secrete the HBeAg, accompanied by a reciprocal sharp fall in the frequency of HBeAg-negative mutants. When the level of HBeAg reaches a point that the immune response to the HBV is suppressed, the viral titers will start to rise again. This is known as HBeAg reversion and the patient re-enters the immune tolerant stage of infection. The mechanisms that preferentially select for replication of HBeAg-mutants are re-activated, and the process of HBeAg seroconversion is re-initiated. In the final panel, we show the situation where genetic drift does not result in a large enough increase in wild-type virus replication to cause HBeAg reversion. In this case the patient remains in the inactive healthy carrier stage of infection, with some fluctuation in the relative frequency of wild-type and HBeAg-negative mutant viruses
Summary of hypotheses to test the assumptions and predictions of the NFDS model
| Hypothesis | Possible experimental test | NFDS model supported if … |
|---|---|---|
| Increased replication rate of HBeAg-negative versus HBeAg-positive virions. | Measure replication rates | HBeAg-negative virions outgrow HBeAg-positive virions. |
| Reversible suppression of HBV-specific CD8+ T cells by precore proteins. | Currently difficult to do, but will probably require cultures of CD8+ T cells | HBV core peptide-specific CD8+ T cells recover function after removal of exposure to precore proteins. |
| HBeAg reversion caused by genetic drift (i.e. patients with low minichromosome effective population size). | Identify patients who have become HBeAg-negative during nucleos(t)ide analog therapy for CHB. Measure neutral selection on the HBV genome at baseline and while they are still HBeAg-negative. | HBeAg reversion associated with a high frequency of HBV codons under neutral selection. |
| Genetic drift increases as viral load declines | Measure neutral selection in serial HBV-DNA samples from HBeAg-negative patients with declining viral loads. | Increased frequency of codons under neutral selection at low viral load |
| Decreased measured strength of positive selection as viral load declines. | Measure positive selection in serial HBV-DNA samples from HBeAg-negative patients with declining viral loads. | Decreased omega (ω) at positively selected codons at low viral load |
Summary of hypotheses to support an immune basis for selection of HBeAg-negative mutants
| Hypothesis | Suggested experimental test | Immunity model supported if … |
|---|---|---|
| Anti-HBe antibodies suppress viral replication. | Look for anti-HBe antibodies within hepatocytes or liver cell lines. | Intracellular anti-HBe demonstrated and associated with reduced HBV replication. Anti-HBe/HBeAg complexes activate cytosolic innate immunity. Positive selection pressure on HBV core gene demonstrated within anti-HBe binding site. |
| CD8+ T cells suppress viral replication in HBeAg-positive subjects. | Simultaneous measurements of peptide-specific CD8+ T-cell activity and precore mutant virions. | Positive correlation between pre-core mutant virion levels and CD8+ T-cell activity. |
| NK cells suppress viral replication. | Currently difficult to do. | |
| Cytosolic innate immunity suppresses viral replication after detecting precore proteins/mRNA. | Transfect mammalian cell lines with precore genes. | Expression of precore genes associated with activation of interferon-stimulated genes. |