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J. Virol., 10 1995, 6158-6169, Vol 69, No. 10
LG Guidotti, B Matzke, H Schaller and FV Chisari
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) transgenic mice whose hepatocytes replicate the
virus at levels comparable to that in the infected livers of patients with
chronic hepatitis have been produced, without any evidence of
cytopathology. High-level viral gene expression was obtained in the liver
and kidney tissues in three independent lineages. These animals were
produced with a terminally redundant viral DNA construct (HBV 1.3) that
starts just upstream of HBV enhancer I, extends completely around the
circular viral genome, and ends just downstream of the unique
polyadenylation site in HBV. In these animals, the viral mRNA is more
abundant in centrilobular hepatocytes than elsewhere in the hepatic lobule.
High-level viral DNA replication occurs inside viral nucleocapsid particles
that preferentially form in the cytoplasm of these centrilobular
hepatocytes, suggesting that an expression threshold must be reached for
nucleocapsid assembly and viral replication to occur. Despite the
restricted distribution of the viral replication machinery in centrilobular
cytoplasmic nucleocapsids, nucleocapsid particles are detectable in the
vast majority of hepatocyte nuclei throughout the hepatic lobule. The
intranuclear nucleocapsid particles are empty, however, suggesting that
viral nucleocapsid particle assembly occurs independently in the nucleus
and the cytoplasm of the hepatocyte and implying that cytoplasmic
nucleocapsid particles do not transport the viral genome across the nuclear
membrane into the nucleus during the viral life cycle. This model creates
the opportunity to examine the influence of viral and host factors on HBV
pathogenesis and replication and to assess the antiviral potential of
pharmacological agents and physiological processes, including the immune
response.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
High-level hepatitis B virus replication in transgenic mice
Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine, Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA.
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