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J Virol. 1992 February; 66(2): 1223-1227

Hepatitis B virus X protein is not central to the viral life cycle in vitro.

H E Blum, Z S Zhang, E Galun, F von Weizsäcker, B Garner, T J Liang and J R Wands

Molecular Hepatology Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Charlestown 02129.

ABSTRACT

The hepatitis B x (HBx) gene is the smallest open reading frame of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) genome. It is conserved among all mammalian hepadnaviruses and is expressed during viral infection. While the HBx protein (pX) has been shown to trans-activate the transcription of a wide range of viral and cellular genes and to induce liver cancer in transgenic mice, the significance of pX for the life cycle of HBV itself has not been elucidated. To assess the function of pX in viral replication and virion export, we designed an X-minus mutant by introduction of a stop codon at the beginning of the HBx gene without affecting the viral polymerase gene product. Transient transfection analyses using different cell lines revealed that this X-minus mutant directs the synthesis of wild-type levels of viral proteins, replicative intermediates, and virion export. These data suggest that the expression of the highly conserved HBx gene is not central for the life cycle of HBV in vitro but may be involved in the pathogenicity of hepadnavirus infection, including liver cancer development.


J Virol. 1992 February; 66(2): 1223-1227




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