| Literature DB >> 34975862 |
Isabelle Desombere1, Freya Van Houtte1, Ali Farhoudi1, Lieven Verhoye1, Caroline Buysschaert1, Yvonne Gijbels1, Sibyl Couvent1, Wilfried Swinnen2, Hans Van Vlierberghe3,4, André Elewaut3,4, Andrea Magri5, Zania Stamataki6,7, Philip Meuleman1, Jane A McKeating5, Geert Leroux-Roels1.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is highly variable and transmits through infected blood to establish a chronic liver infection in the majority of patients. Our knowledge on the infectivity of clinical HCV strains is hampered by the lack of in vitro cell culture systems that support efficient viral replication. We and others have reported that HCV can associate with and infect immune cells and may thereby evade host immune surveillance and elimination. To evaluate whether B cells play a role in HCV transmission, we assessed the ability of B cells and sera from recent (<2 years) or chronic (≥ 2 years) HCV patients to infect humanized liver chimeric mice. HCV was transmitted by B cells from chronic infected patients whereas the sera were non-infectious. In contrast, B cells from recently infected patients failed to transmit HCV to the mice, whereas all serum samples were infectious. We observed an association between circulating anti-glycoprotein E1E2 antibodies and B cell HCV transmission. Taken together, our studies provide evidence for HCV transmission by B cells, findings that have clinical implications for prophylactic and therapeutic antibody-based vaccine design.Entities:
Keywords: B cell; hepatitis C virus; immune response; infection; persistence; transmission
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34975862 PMCID: PMC8716873 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.775098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Demographic, virologic and immunologic characteristics of HCV-infected patients.
| Patient | HCV-infection | HCV-RNA | HCV-specific IgG | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ID | age, gender | route | durationb | serum | B-cells | anti-E1E2H77 c | neutralization to HCVpp-H77 (IC50)d | |
| (IU/ml) | (IU/106 B-cells) | |||||||
|
|
| 30, M | IDU | 1y | 6,74 106 | <46 | < 10 | < 50% |
|
| 28, F | IDU | ≤ 1y | 1,42 106 | <46 | < 10 | < 50% | |
|
| 36, F | IDU | 5m | 1,29 107 | 3,51 104 | 559 | < 50% | |
|
| 34, M | IDU | 1y 4m | 5,30 106 | 9,54 104 | 4898 | 4065 | |
|
| 47, F | IDU | 25y | 3,70 106 | 2,15 104 | 90991 | 3311 | |
|
| 28, M | IDU | 3y | 5,00 106 | 1,11 105 | 30440 | 21616 | |
|
|
| 64, M | transfusion | >10y | 1,25 107 | 5,60 104 | 259 | < 50% |
|
| 68, F | transfusion | 30y | 2,18 106 | 8,28 104 | 30339 | 14286 | |
|
| 64, M | transfusion | 15y | 8,91 105 | 1,91 104 | 3040 | 1858 | |
|
| 47, M | transfusion | 28y | 1,40 106 | 6,52 103 | 35727 | 6250 | |
|
| 66, M | transfusion | 20y | 2,02 106 | 6,46 103 | 4046 | 922 | |
|
| 28, F | IDU | ≥ 5y | 3,74 105 | 4,31 103 | 16218 | 6361 | |
|
|
| 26, M | IDU | 1y | 5,41 105 | <46 | < 10 | < 50% |
|
| 33, M | IDU | 3m | 2,88 106 | 2,42 104 | 109 | < 50% | |
|
| 25, M | IDU | 4m | 2,29 107 | 1,46 105 | 165 | < 50% | |
|
| 31, M | IDU | ≥ 5y | 9,76 105 | 3,38 104 | 3396 | 513 | |
IDU, injecting drug use. bTime elapsed between initial HCV-infection/diagnosis and biological sampling for the present study (y, year; m, month). cAnti-E1E2H77 IgG levels are expressed as reciprocal endpoint dilution titer of autologous serum in EIA; <10, IgG was not detected at serum-dilution 1/10. dNeutralizing activities of autologous serum to HCV-pseudoviral particles expressing envelope proteins of gt1a (HCVpp_H77) are expressed as IC50 (reciprocal titer); <50%, neutralization did not reach 50%. eSerum and B cells from patients P05, P08 and P12 were sampled at multiple time points, only 1 time-point is shown. fPatient P15, initially infected with gt3a, experienced a HCV-super-infection with gt1a and has donated biological specimens twice with a 3-year interval.
Figure 1HCV quasispecies and infectivity of serum or B cells in hu-liver-uPA-SCID mice. HCV-infected patients (gt1a, gt1b and gt3a) are grouped according to their E1E2 quasispecies (QS) diversity and QS-score defined by maximum-likelihood phylogenetic trees of the E1E2 region ( ). Patients were grouped by low QS-score <0.25 (recent infection) and high QS-score >0.30 (chronic infection). Serum containing 3x105 IU HCV RNA was injected into the peritoneal cavity or 106 B cells delivered via the intra-splenic route. Mice were bled 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8 weeks post-inoculation and plasma analyzed for HCV RNA level that are indicated by a heat map. ‘+, <750’ means that HCV RNA was detectable but <750 IU/ml (LOQ). Repeated experiments are indicated by hu-liver-uPA-SCID mice numbers. Patient P15 experienced a HCV super-infection and donated blood in 2006 and 2009. SNA, sample not available. ∆, not done (color code extrapolated). †, animal died before week 8.
Figure 2HCV RNA association with infectious B cells. (A) Selected virions are infectious after passage in new uPA-SCID-mice. Chimeric mice were injected with 104 IU of mouse-passaged virions originating after B cell mediated HCV transmission (marked with prefix ‘m’ and ID of the originating mouse). HCV RNA levels (IU/ml) were measured in mouse plasma and plotted against time (days, X-axis). The animal injected with mP09_K1461R died before the end of the observation period. All animals demonstrate high viral replication detectable as soon as one week after viral inoculation. (B) Incubating B cells from a naïve donor with infectious plasma does not transmit infection. Chimeric mice were challenged (IS) with 106 B cells derived from a healthy individual (B_healthy) that were pre-incubated (37°C, 2h) with 5x104 IU infectious mK983 virions alone (B_healthy + mK983) or immune-complexed with 100 µg autologous IgG (B_healthy + mK983 + IgG_P12) and subsequently washed to remove non-adherent virions. As controls, the infectivity of B cells from patient P12 (B_P12) and of 104 IU mouse-derived virions (mK983) is shown. Limit of HCV-RNA quantification (LOQ) is 750 IU/ml (dotted horizontal line). (C) Detection of (+) and (-) strand HCV RNA in infectious and non-infectious B cells. Graphic presentation of (+)ssRNA and (-)ssRNA detection in 3 non-infectious (upper panels) and 5 infectious B cells using the Tth-based RT-PCR-method as described. Bars represent the absolute amounts of B cells tested, normalized for total RNA extraction (y-axis). Progressive dilution of B cells is represented on the x-axis. Black bars refer to the simultaneous detection of (+) and (-)ssRNA; grey bars to single (+)ssRNA detection and empty bars to RNA not detectable ( ).
Figure 3Quasispecies analysis of B cell mediated infection. Schematic representation of HVR1 viral quasispecies (QS) distribution in human serum and B cells at the time of injection and in uPA-SCID plasma for three gt1b-patients (P09, P10 and P12) and one gt3a-patient (P16). Pie charts represent the fraction of each clone per compartment based on HVR1-diversity (number of clones analyzed, and mouse identification are shown). HVR1-isolates are unique for each patient and indicated by different colors. Closely related HVR1-variants, based on individual AA-similarity and clustering in phylogenetic analysis, are depicted in different intensities of the same color ( ). For each patient a representative mouse strain (#1753,…) is depicted and pairwise full E1E2 similarity to similar strains in other compartments was calculated using the IDENTIFY similarity matrix for pairwise alignment (Bioedit Sequence Alignment Editor, right panel). For each compartment, the number (n) of similar clones and their median E1E2-sequence similarity with mouse-derived strains are shown in the tables on the right. Differences between pairwise E1E2-sequence similarities were calculated (*p<0.05; **p<0.01; ***p<0.001; ns, non-significant; Mann-Whitney U test) and shown on the pie charts. In the serum of P12, the only strain that showed similarities to the reference mouse strain carried a C-deletion at position AA394 (Δ C394), suggesting non-viability. For P16, variability in two additional E2-regions was considered and depicted by shading. Analysis demonstrates that mouse-derived strains occurring after B cell transfer closely resemble strains found in the B cell compartment (p=ns), and are significantly different from serum-derived strains.
Figure 4Relationship between circulating IgG, IgM, B cell associated HCV RNA and viral glycoprotein recognition. (A) Association between circulating anti-E1E2 IgG and genomic HCV RNA in serum and B cells. Anti-E1E2 IgG was measured in serum and genomic HCV RNA in serum and B cells from 29 HCV patients, 15 studied in detail herein (P15 in 2006 and 2009) (●) and 14 additional ones (○). Patients are grouped according to absence (4 patients) or presence (26 specimens from 25 patients) of anti-E1E2 IgG in serum and occurrence of genomic HCV RNA in serum and B cells is examined in both groups. HCV RNA is present in all sera irrespective of circulating anti-E1E2 IgG whereas it is only detected in B cells of patients with serum anti-E1E2 IgG. (B) Binding of IgG and IgM to E1E2 proteins derived from different compartments. E1E2-proteins were generated using cDNA clones of the most prevalent variants isolated from serum and B cells from patients P09 (●), P10 (▲) and P12 (■). Each symbol represents a unique E1E2-protein while its color refers to the strain of origin as shown in and . Serum from patients P09, P10 and P12 was assayed at dilutions 1/100 (IgG) or 1/50 (IgM) in an EIA with GNA-captured E1E2 proteins. E1E2-specific IgG binds better to envelope proteins derived from B cells than to serum variants (p=0.028, Mann-Whitney U test). This preference is even more pronounced in E1E2-specific IgM (p=0.0005, Mann-Whitney U test) that shows the strongest binding with proteins representing the viral variants isolated from B cells shown to be closely related to isolates observed in plasma of B cell infected mice (shown in the red box). ns, not significant.