| Literature DB >> 26779147 |
Lemonica Koumbi1, Peter Karayiannis2.
Abstract
Epigenetic modifications are stable alterations in gene expression that do not involve mutations of the genetic sequence itself. It has become increasingly clear that epigenetic factors contribute to the outcome of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection by affecting cellular and virion gene expression, viral replication and the development of hepatocellular carcinoma. HBV persists in the nucleus of infected hepatocytes as a stable non-integrated covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) which functions as a minichromosome. There are two major forms of HBV epigenetic regulation: posttranslational modification of histone proteins associated with the cccDNA minichromosome and DNA methylation of viral and host genomes. This review explores how HBV can interphase with host epigenetic regulation in order to evade host defences and to promote its own survival and persistence. We focus on the effect of cccDNA bound-histone modifications and the methylation status of HBV DNA in regulating viral replication. Investigation of HBV epigenetic control has important clinical correlates with regards to the development of potential therapeutic regimens that will successfully eradicate HBV infection and deal with HBV reactivation in those undergoing treatment with demethylating agents.Entities:
Keywords: acetylation; cccDNA; epigenetics; hepatitis B virus; histone; methylation
Year: 2016 PMID: 26779147 PMCID: PMC4701982 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.01491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
An outline of the main research findings on the (A) methylation and (B) acetylation mechanisms involved in HBV infection.
| Reference | |
|---|---|
| Methylation of integrated HBV DNA. | |
| HBx induces DNMT activity and hypermethylation of tumor suppressor gene promoters via DNMT3A1 and DNMT3A2 methylation. | |
| Island II methylation correlates with low or no HBsAg production. cccDNA methylation correlates with viral gene expression levels. | |
| Methylation of integrated and non-integrated liver HBV DNA in islands I (60%) and II (50%). | |
| cccDNA methylation correlates with HBeAg-positivity in CHB patients and impairs virion productivity. | |
| HBV DNA is unmethylated in early carcinogenesis and highly methylated in cancer. | |
| HBx recruits DNMT3A and induces the methylation and transcriptional silencing of IL-4 receptor and metallothionein-1F. | |
| HBx expression correlates with DNMT1 and DNMT3A and hypermethylation of the p16INK4A promoter in CHB patients. | |
| cccDNA methylation is associated with HBV viremia and aging in cirrhotic CHB patients. | |
| HBV DNA methylation correlates with decreased viral replication and gene expression. | |
| Increased expression of DNMT3 down-regulates viral protein and pgRNA production. | |
| HBV DNA methylation in CHB implicates island I in14%, island II 0.6% and island III 3.7% of cases. | |
| HBV DNA is unmethylated in occult HBV. | |
| HBV CpG island distribution differs between HBV genotypes. | |
| HBx induces the hypermethylation of the uPA promoter (via the recruitment of DNMT3A2) leading to liver regeneration impairment. | |
| Low HBV replication correlates with cccDNA hypoacetylation and the recruitment of p300/CBP and HDAC1. | |
| HBx recruitment onto cccDNA correlates with HBV replication and acetyltransferase upregulation. | |
| IFN-α treatment reduces DHBV acetylation of cccDNA-bound H3K9 and H3K27 histones but has no effect on cccDNA-bound H3K9me3 and H3K27me2 demethylases. | |
| IFN-α inhibits viral transcription by cccDNA hypoacetylation through active recruitment onto cccDNA of HDAC and of the transcriptional repressor complex. | |
| IL6 induces cccDNA hypoacetylation and silencing by reducing the binding of transcription factors (HNF1α, HNF4α, and STAT3) onto cccDNA. | |
| HBx recruitment onto cccDNA activates HBV transcription by counteracting chromatin-mediated transcriptional repression established by SETDB1, HP1 and H3K9me3. | |
| IFN-α represses HBV by reducing active PTMs in cccDNA and that this effect can be recapitulated with the C646 agent (inhibits p300/CBP) | |