| Literature DB >> 26398702 |
Xiuting He1, Jie Li1, Jing Wu1, Manli Zhang2, Pujun Gao3.
Abstract
The hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major risk factor in the development of chronic hepatitis (CH) and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The activation‑induced cytidine deaminase (AID)/apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide‑like (APOBEC) family of cytidine deaminases is significant in innate immunity, as it restricts numerous viruses, including HBV, through hypermutation‑dependent and ‑independent mechanisms. It is important to induce covalently closed circular (ccc)DNA degradation by interferon‑α without causing side effects in the infected host cell. Furthermore, organisms possess multiple mechanisms to regulate the expression of AID/APOBECs, control their enzymatic activity and restrict their access to DNA or RNA substrates. Therefore, the AID/APOBECs present promising targets for preventing and treating viral infections. In addition, gene polymorphisms of the AID/APOBEC family may alter host susceptibility to HBV acquisition and CH disease progression. Through G‑to‑A hypermutation, AID/APOBECs also edit HBV DNA and facilitate the mutation of HBV DNA, which may assist the virus to evolve and potentially escape from the immune responses. The AID/APOBEC family and their associated editing patterns may also exert oncogenic activity. Understanding the effects of cytidine deaminases in CH virus-induced hepatocarcinogenesis may aid with developing efficient prophylactic and therapeutic strategies against HCC.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26398702 PMCID: PMC4626158 DOI: 10.3892/mmr.2015.4312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Med Rep ISSN: 1791-2997 Impact factor: 2.952
Reported hyperediting and restriction activity of AID/APOBECs against HBV DNA.
| Cytidine deaminases | Hyperediting activity | Dinucleotide preference | Restriction activity against HBV DNA | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AID | Deaminates each viral RNA and HBV minus-strand DNA | GpC, ApC | Active | |
| A1 | Deaminates HBV minus-strand DNA | TpC | Active | |
| A2 | NI | NI | Not active | |
| A3A | Deaminates each strand of HBV DNA | Weak bias | Active/not active | |
| A3B | Deaminates each strand of HBV DNA | GpC, ApC | Active | |
| A3C | Deaminates HBV minus-strand DNA | No bias | Active but weak/not active | |
| A3DE | Not active | N/A | NI | |
| A3F | Deaminates each strand of HBV DNA | TpC, GpC | Active | |
| A3G | Deaminates each strand of HBV DNA | CpC | Active | |
| A3H | Deaminates each strand of HBV DNA | TpC | NI |
Controversial experimental results exist in the article. NI, no information found; N/A, not applicable; AID, activation-induced cytidine deaminase; APOBEC, apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like; HBV, hepatitis B virus.
Figure 1HBV DNA is transcribed to pgRNA as a replicative RNA intermediate, according to which the minus DNA strand (cDNA) forms. ssDNA is formed as the pgRNA is degraded. AID/APOBECs catalyze cytosine deamination of HBV DNA on the cDNA, producing uracil during reverse transcription. Uracils in DNA (including cccDNA) are recognized and excised by UNG leading to formation of AP sites. These AP sites are recognized by cellular AP endonucleases leading to DNA digestion. The HBV DNAs that do not undergo degradation, generate C-to-T transitions in minus strand DNA and G-to-A transitions in plus strand DNA during general DNA replication. HBV, hepatitis B virus; pgRNA, pregenomic RNA; ssDNA, single stranded DNA; AID, activation-induced cytidine deaminase; APOBEC, apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like; cccDNA, covalently closed circular DNA; UNG, uracil DNA glycosylases; AP, apurinic/apyrimidinic.
Figure 2The rcDNA genome is converted into cccDNA by cellular repair factors. Then, the cccDNA is transcribed to the pgRNA and subgenomic mRNAs (not shown). The mRNAs are transported to the cytoplasm. The pgRNA is translated in the cytosol to form HBV core protein and the viral polymerase. These three components assemble to form the core particle. The first (minus) DNA strand forms within the core particles via reverse transcription of the pgRNA to DNA; the pgRNA is degraded by viral RNase H as the plus strand is synthesized. (A) A3B inhibits the binding of HnRnp K to the Enh II of HBV; (B) A3G may inhibit pgRNA packaging; (C) A3G renders HBV core protein-associated full-length pgRNA nuclease-sensitive; (D) A3G blocks DNA strand elongation and targets a DNA-RNA hybrid. rcDNA, relaxed circular DNA; cccDNA, covalently closed circular DNA; pgRNA, pregenomic RNA; HBV, hepatitis B virus; APOBEC, apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like; HnRnp K, heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein K; Enh II, enhancer II.
Summary of linkage studies between clinical indicators and AID/APOBEC.
| A, APOBEC3 polymorphism studies
| ||
|---|---|---|
| Study (ref.) | Cohort description | Association with APOBEC3 polymorphisms |
| Abe | 724 patients with chronic HBV infection and 469 healthy control subjects. | No significant association between A3B deletion polymorphism and chronic HBV carrier state. A3B gene deletion homozygosity was associated with mild liver fibrosis. |
| Zhang | 1,124 patients with HBV-associated HCC, 510 individuals with persistent HBV infection and 826 healthy control subjects. | At least one A3B deletion allele increased the risk for persistent HBV infection and HCC development. |
| Ezzikouri | 179 HBV chronic carriers and 216 healthy control subjects. | No significant difference in the frequencies of deleted A3B alleles or genotypes between the two groups. Patients with deleted genotypes experienced a faster progression of liver disease than those with insertion genotypes. |
AID, activation-induced cytidine deaminase; APOBEC, apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like; HBV, hepatitis B virus; CH, chronic hepatitis; LC, liver cirrhosis; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HBeAg, hepatitis B e antigen.
Summary of linkage studies between HCC and AID/APOBECs.
| Protein | Experimental targets | Indication | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | TM, TR | All of the TM and one TR had liver dysplasia. 8/35 TM developed HCC. | |
| A1 | TM, TR | The aberrant editing markedly reduced levels of protein expression by the tumor suppressor gene, | |
| A2 | TM | HCC developed in 2/20 A2 TM at 72 weeks of age. Significantly high frequencies of nucleotide alterations in | |
| A3 | CL, HCCT | C-terminally truncated | |
| A3A | CL | A3A led to induction of cellular DNA breaks and activation of damage responses in a deaminase-dependent manner. A3A expression induced cell cycle arrest. | |
| AID | CL, HCCT | The majority of liver tissues with AID upregulation contained multiple genetic changes in the p53 gene. Aberrant activation of AID in hepatocytes resulted in accumulation of multiple genetic alterations in the p53 gene. | |
| AID | TM | HCC developed in 27% of tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase-AID TM at the age of 90 weeks. The HCC expressed α-fetoprotein and possessed deleterious mutations in the tumor suppressor gene, |
AID, activation-induced cytidine deaminase; APOBEC, apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like; TM, transgenic mice; TR, transgenic rabbit; CL, cell line; CH, chronic hepatitis; LC, liver cirrhosis; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HCCT, HCC tissue; NAT1, novel A1 target no 1; EIF4G2, eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4 γ, 2; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; HBx, hepatitis B virus X; HSF1, heat shock transcription factor 1; TRP53, tumor protein P53.