| Literature DB >> 29129708 |
Kelly R Long1, Elena Lomonosova2, Qilan Li3, Nathan L Ponzar4, Juan A Villa5, Erin Touchette6, Stephen Rapp7, R Matt Liley8, Ryan P Murelli9, Alexandre Grigoryan10, R Mark Buller11, Lisa Wilson12, John Bial13, John E Sagartz14, John E Tavis15.
Abstract
Chronic hepatitis B virus infection cannot be cured by current therapies, so new treatments are urgently needed. We recently identified novel inhibitors of the hepatitis B virus ribonuclease H that suppress viral replication in cell culture. Here, we employed immunodeficient FRG KO mice whose livers had been engrafted with primary human hepatocytes to ask whether ribonuclease H inhibitors can suppress hepatitis B virus replication in vivo. Humanized FRG KO mice infected with hepatitis B virus were treated for two weeks with the ribonuclease H inhibitors #110, an α-hydroxytropolone, and #208, an N-hydroxypyridinedione. Hepatitis B virus viral titers and S and e antigen plasma levels were measured. Treatment with #110 and #208 caused significant reductions in plasma viremia without affecting hepatitis B virus S or e antigen levels, and viral titers rebounded following treatment cessation. This is the expected pattern for inhibitors of viral DNA synthesis. Compound #208 suppressed viral titers of both hepatitis B virus genotype A and C isolates. These data indicate that Hepatitis B virus replication can be suppressed during infection in an animal by inhibiting the viral ribonuclease H, validating the ribonuclease H as a novel target for antiviral drug development.Entities:
Keywords: Antivirals; Chimeric mice; FRG; HBV; RNaseH
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29129708 PMCID: PMC5743599 DOI: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2017.11.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antiviral Res ISSN: 0166-3542 Impact factor: 5.970