| Literature DB >> 26784218 |
Dvora Witt-Kehati1,2, Maya Bitton Alaluf3, Amir Shlomai4,5,6.
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a small DNA virus that infects the liver. Current anti-HBV drugs efficiently suppress viral replication but do not eradicate the virus due to the persistence of its episomal DNA. Efforts to develop reliable in vitro systems to model HBV infection, an imperative tool for studying HBV biology and its interactions with the host, have been hampered by major limitations at the level of the virus, the host and infection readouts. This review summarizes major milestones in the development of in vitro systems to study HBV. Recent advances in our understanding of HBV biology, such as the discovery of the bile-acid pump sodium-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) as a receptor for HBV, enabled the establishment of NTCP expressing hepatoma cell lines permissive for HBV infection. Furthermore, advanced tissue engineering techniques facilitate now the establishment of HBV infection systems based on primary human hepatocytes that maintain their phenotype and permissiveness for infection over time. The ability to differentiate inducible pluripotent stem cells into hepatocyte-like cells opens the door for studying HBV in a more isogenic background, as well. Thus, the recent advances in in vitro models for HBV infection holds promise for a better understanding of virus-host interactions and for future development of more definitive anti-viral drugs.Entities:
Keywords: hepatocye-like cells; primary human hepatocytes; virus-host interactions
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26784218 PMCID: PMC4728581 DOI: 10.3390/v8010021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
A summary of the various in vitro systems for studying HBV biology.
| Cell Culture Systems | Advantages | Disadvantages | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary duck hepatocytes | Recapitulating the whole hepadnavirus life cycle. | Conclusions derived from this system (cccDNA biology, viral entry) are not necessarily valid for HBV. | Infected with DHBV. |
| Increased amplification of cccDNA (ideal for studying cccDNA biology). | DHBV differs from HBV in several properties (See text for details). | ||
| Primary woodchuck hepatocytes | Recapitulating the whole hepadnavirus life cycle. | The system is hard to handle and maintain, few studies using this | Infected with WHV. |
| Expensive. | The system is very useful for | ||
| Primary tree shrews ( | The only species susceptible for HBV infection besides humans and chimpanzees. | Expensive | Used for |
| Immortalized hepatoma cell lines | Convenient for work. | Not permissive for HBV infection. | Examples: HepG2, Huh7 cell lines. |
| Minimal variability. | Cancerous cell lines. Virus-host interaction studies often non-reliable. | ||
| Relatively cheap. | |||
| HepG2.2.15 | Stable and continuous HBV gene expression and replication. | Incomplete viral life cycle (cells not permissive for infection). | Hepatoma cells with a cloned head to tail HBV dimer, extensively used for anti-viral drug testing and as a platform for |
| A potential source for tissue culture derived virions. | Virions are produced from the integrated DNA (unlike situation | ||
| Minimal amount of cccDNA. | |||
| HepAD38 | Tightly controlled system to study HBV. | Incomplete viral life cycle (cells not permissive for infection). | Hepatoma cells stably expressing HBV from a Tet-on/Tet-off system. |
| Robust production of virions and enhanced cccDNA accumulation in the cells. | |||
| A potential source for tissue culture derived virions. | |||
| HepDE19 | A platform for a large-scale cccDNA-targeting drug screening (HBeAg as a surrogate marker for cccDNA abundance). | Incomplete viral life cycle (cells not permissive for infection) | HepG2 cells stably transfected with a Tet-inducible mutated HBV genome. The HBeAg is expressed from the episomal DNA (cccDNA) but not from the integrated genome. |
| HepaRG | Recapitulating the whole life cycle of HBV in the context of authentic infection. | The use of PEG is required to achieve infection, relatively low infection efficiency. | This cell line presents morphological and functional features similar to primary hepatocytes. |
| An experimental platform for studies addressing key questions in HBV biology. | Stringent conditions needed to maintain those cells’ state of differentiation. | Susceptible to HBV infection upon supplementation of corticoids and DMSO to maintain the cells’ differentiation state. | |
| NTCP-expressing hepatoma cell lines | Recapitulate the whole life cycle of HBV in the context of authentic infection. | The multiplicity of infection (MOI) needed to achieve infection is extremely high. | HepG2 and Huh7-based cell lines. |
| Flexibility and easy handling. | In most instances PEG is needed to enhance infection. | Upon co-culturing with HBV-specific CD8 cells (trans-well system) the system can be used for immunobiology studies. | |
| No substantial viral spreading following infection, infection is short-lived small amount of cccDNA detected. | |||
| Hepatoma cells are physiologically impaired in many intracellular pathways and functions, limiting their use as a platform for studying virus-host interactions. | |||
| Primary human hepatocytes | The gold standard host cell for HBV infection experiments. | Phenotypically unstable | |
| Rapidly lose permissiveness for HBV infection. | |||
| Large variability among hepatocyte donors | |||
| Short durability of infection. | |||
| Fetal human hepatocytes | Phenotypically close (but not equal) to primary adult human hepatocytes. | Limited infection efficiency and apparent absence of viral spreading. | The addition of DMSO may enhance viral replication. |
| Large donor-top-donor variations. | Co-culturing with hepatic non-parenchymal cells and subsequent addition of 2% DMSO leads to the formation of hepatocyte islands with prolonged phenotypic maintenance | ||
| Limited availability. | |||
| Micro-patterned co-cultured (MPCC) system | Preserves hepatocyte functions and viability over weeks following plating. | Wide variability between donors in terms of HBV permissiveness. | The system is based on micro-patterning of human hepatocytes in small islands of 200–400 cells each and co-culturing the cells with mouse fibroblasts. |
| May serve as a platform for drug toxicity and drug interaction studies. | Infection efficiency is low (30%), no substantial spreading of infection. | ||
| Fresh as well as cryopreserved hepatocytes could be micro-patterned. | The inhibition of the innate immune response is required to achieve infection. | ||
| Hepatocyte-like cells (HLCs) | Supports HBV productive infection. | Does not represent the full phenotypic spectrum of primary adult human hepatocytes (similar to fetal hepatocytes). | The shift point for the iPS cells to become HBV permissive is at around days 18–20 of differentiation, which is the time of phenotypic switch from hepatoblast-like to fetal hepatocyte like cells. |
| Isogenic background. | Needs high degree of expertise. Complicated protocols involved. | ||
| May serve as a platform to dissect host factors essential for HBV infection and replication. | The inhibition of the innate immune response is required to achieve infection | ||
| A recombinant HBV baculovirus system | Enables the delivery of a functional HBV genome into hepatoma cells resulting in productive HBV replication, formation of infectious viruses and establishment of a detectable intracellular cccDNA pool. | Bypassing the natural entry stage of HBV. | The vector is produced in insect cells. |
| Part of the host response to HBV infection might be masked by a non-specific response to the viral vector. | |||
| Adenovirus vector carrying the HBV genome (Ad-HBV) | Infect a wide range of hepatocytes irrespective of species barrier resulting in cccDNA formation and robust HBV replication. | ||
HBV: Hepatitis B virus; cccDNA: covalently closed circular DNA; DHBV: Duck HBV; WHV: Woodchuck hepatitis virus; iPS: Induced pluripotent stem; HBeAg: HBV e-Antigen; PEG: Polyethylene glycol; DMSO: Dimethyl sulfoxide