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Journal of Virology, November 2005, p. 13778-13793, Vol. 79, No. 21
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.21.13778-13793.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular Virology, Hygiene Institute, University of Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 345, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany,1 Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of Essen, Virchowstrasse 171, D-45147 Essen, Germany2
Received 10 June 2005/ Accepted 6 August 2005
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that is given alone or in combination with ribavirin. Unfortunately,
this treatment is ineffective in eliminating the virus in a large
proportion of individuals. IFN-induced antiviral activities have been
intensively studied in the HCV replicon system. It was found that both
IFN-
and IFN-
inhibit HCV replicons, but the
underlying mechanisms have not yet been identified. Of note is that
nearly all of these studies were performed with the human hepatoma cell
line Huh-7. Here, we report that genotypes 1b and 2a replicons also
replicate in the human hepatoblastoma cell line HuH6. Similar to what
has been described for Huh-7 cells, we observed that efficient HCV
replication in HuH6 cells depends on the presence of cell
culture-adaptive mutations and the permissiveness of the host cell.
However, three major differences exist: in HuH6 cells, viral
replication is (i) independent from ongoing cell proliferation, (ii)
less sensitive to certain antiviral compounds, and (iii) highly
resistant to IFN-
. The latter is not due to a general defect
in IFN signaling, as IFN-
induces the nuclear translocation of
signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1), the
enhanced transcription of several IFN-regulated genes, and the
inhibition of unrelated viruses such as influenza A virus and Semliki
Forest virus. Taken together, the results establish HuH6 replicon cells
as a valuable tool for IFN studies and for the evaluation of antiviral
compounds. |
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9.6-kb
single-stranded RNA genome of positive polarity (for a review, see
reference 4). The genome
is flanked by highly structured nontranslated regions (NTRs) important
for both RNA translation and replication. Within the 5' NTR, an
internal ribosome entry site (IRES) has been identified that permits
expression of the viral proteins in the absence of a cap structure
(44). The HCV genome
encodes a large, single polyprotein of approximately 3,000 amino acids
that is co- and posttranslationally cleaved by cellular and viral
proteinases into 10 polypeptides (core, E1, E2, p7, NS2, NS3, NS4A,
NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B). The production of an additional viral protein by
ribosomal frameshift has also been reported
(53,
57), but its function
remains to be defined.
Worldwide, about 170 million individuals
have been infected with HCV; in >80% of all cases, the virus
establishes a persistent infection
(56) which frequently
leads to chronic liver disease with liver fibrosis, cirrhosis, and
eventually hepatocellular carcinoma
(24,
50). The most advanced
therapy for hepatitis C patients currently consists of polyethylene
glycol-conjugated alpha interferon (IFN-
) and ribavirin, but
this treatment has its limitations
(37). One problem is the
relatively poor response of patients infected with certain
HCV genotypes. For example, only 50% of patients infected with genotype
1 mount a sustained viral response, whereas 80 to 90% of
those infected with genotype 2 and genotype 3 viruses can do so. The
correlation between therapy success and the infecting genotype suggests
the involvement of viral factors, but the underlying molecular
mechanism(s) is not yet understood.
IFNs are a rather diverse
class of cytokines with key functions in the innate immune response to
viruses (18,
43,
47). Two
types of IFNs can be distinguished that have partially overlapping
biological properties. Type I IFNs are secreted by most virus-infected
cells and by a highly specialized leukocyte population, termed natural
IFN-producing cells (8).
The human genome contains several IFN genes including 12 IFN-
subtypes and IFN-ß. In contrast, the expression of the only
type II IFN, IFN-
, is restricted to immune cells, such as
activated T lymphocytes and natural killer (NK) cells. IFNs bind to
highly specific cell surface receptors, which trigger the
phosphorylation and nuclear translocation of certain latent
transcription factors, known as signal transducers and activators of
transcription (STATs). Type I IFNs bind to the IFN-
receptor,
which leads to the formation of IFN-stimulated gene factor 3 (ISGF-3),
a heterotrimer consisting of STAT1, STAT2, and IFN response factor
9/p48 that activates gene transcription via binding to the
IFN-stimulated response element. A similar signaling pathway has been
described for IFN-
. In this case, the gamma activation factor,
a phosphorylated STAT1 homodimer, is translocated to the nucleus where
it enhances gene expression by binding to the gamma activation site
(GAS). Besides these well-established pathways, alternative pathways
have been described, but their contribution to the antiviral activity
of IFN remains to be further elucidated
(43).
Type I IFNs
execute their antiviral activities through the induction of proteins
such as the MxA guanosine triphosphatase, the double-stranded
RNA-activated protein kinase (PKR), or the 2'-5'
oligoadenylate synthetase (OAS). These effector proteins may interfere
with distinct steps in viral replication or trigger the degradation of
viral RNAs. By contrast, IFN-
predominantly induces the
expression of proteins with systemic functions such as those involved
in antigen processing and presentation (e.g., major histocompatibility
complex class II). In addition, IFN-
induces the expression
and release of chemokines that activate and orchestrate the adaptive
immune response (e.g., inducible protein 10 [IP10]). However,
IFN-
may also contribute to the establishment of an antiviral
state by the induction of proteins with direct antiviral activities
(19).
By using
Huh-7 cells that contain selectable, self-replicating HCV RNAs
(replicons), it has been shown that recombinant IFN-
inhibits
HCV replication (9,
14). The idea that
IFN-
enforces the critical first line of defense in the
HCV-infected liver was further elaborated by Li and coworkers, who
demonstrated in a coculture experiment that NK cells blocked HCV
replication in Huh-7 cells through the secretion of IFN-
(31). Clinical data are
limited, and whether or not hepatitis C patients benefit from
IFN-
administration is still controversial
(17). Nevertheless, it is
interesting to note that type I and type II IFNs inhibit HCV RNA
replication in Huh-7 cells in a highly synergistic manner
(30,
42). Given the power of
combination therapies in the treatment of persistent virus infections,
it might be rewarding to elucidate the mechanism(s) responsible for the
observed synergistic antiviral effects of IFN-
/ß and
IFN-
, e.g., whether IFN-
and IFN-
induce the
expression of type-specific effector proteins that may interfere with
different steps of the HCV life cycle.
Here, we report on a new
host cell line for HCV replication. We show that the human
hepatoblastoma cell line HuH6 supports persistent replication of Con1
(genotype 1b) and JFH-1 (genotype 2a) replicons. In line with previous
studies in which Huh-7 cells were used as hosts for HCV replicons
(5,
32,
34), we show that HCV
replication in HuH6 cells depends on the presence of cell
culture-adaptive mutations and host cell permissiveness. Compared with
Huh-7 cells, however, HCV replication in HuH6 cells is independent from
ongoing cell proliferation, less sensitive to certain NS5B-specific
antiviral compounds, and highly resistant to IFN-
. These
differences make HuH6 cells an interesting new tool for HCV
research.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Background information on HuH6 and Huh-7 cells
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The HCV replicons
I341PI-Luc/NS3-3'/Con1/ET and
I341PI-Luc/NS3-3'/Con1/GND and the corresponding pFK
plasmids were described previously
(32). The nucleotide
exchanges T3472C, A4531G, C5474G, and C7754T were introduced into
pFK-I341PI-Luc/NS3-3'/Con1/ET and
pFK-I389neo/NS3-3'/Con1/ET by site-directed
mutagenesis. JFH-1 replicons with a genome organization identical to
that of the Con1 replicons I389Neo/NS3-3'/wt and
I389Neo/NS3-3'/
GDD were transcribed by
using plasmids pSGR-JFH1 and pSGR-JFH1/
GDD, respectively
(26). Both plasmids were
kindly provided by Takaji Wakita (Department of Microbiology, Tokyo
Metropolitan Institute for Neuroscience, Tokyo, Japan). The newly
constructed plasmids pFK-I341PI-Luc/NS3-3'/JFH1 and
pFK-I341 PI-Luc/NS3-3'/JFH1/
GDD
contain the T7-promoter sequence fused to the 5' NTR of the
JFH-1 consensus sequence, followed by the poliovirus IRES (PI), the
firefly luciferase gene, the encephalomyocarditis virus IRES, the
NS3-to-5B coding sequence and the 3' NTR of JFH-1, the
hepatitis delta virus genomic ribozyme, and the T7 terminator
sequence. Plasmid pFK-I341PI-Luc/NS3-3'/JFH1 was
constructed by replacing the Con1 and EMCV sequences of
pFK-PI-Luc/NS3-3'/ET
(32) by corresponding
sequences derived from pSGR-JFH1. Plasmid
pFK-I341PI-Luc/NS3-3'/JFH1/
GDD has an
in-frame deletion of 10 amino acids
(MLVCGDDLVV) encompassing the GDD
motif of NS5B (underlined) and was generated by replacing the sequence
between the KpnI and AscI restriction sites in
pFK-I341PI-Luc/NS3-3'/JFH1 by a corresponding
fragment derived from
pSGR-JFH1/
GDD.
Interferons and other chemicals.
Recombinant human IFN-
2 and
IFN-
were purchased from Roche Molecular Biochemicals (Basel,
Switzerland). Roscovitine was obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (Deisenhofen,
Germany). Nucleosidic and nonnucleosidic NS5B-specific inhibitors were
kindly provided by Gerhard Pürstinger (Institute of
Pharmacy, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria) and Piet
Herdewijn and Johan Neyts (both from the Laboratories of Medicinal
Chemistry and Virology, Rega Institute for Medical Research, Leuven,
Belgium).
Generation and transfection of HCV RNAs. The generation of HCV RNAs by in vitro transcription and conditions of electroporation have been described previously (33).
Virus plaque assay. Cell monolayers in six-well microplates were infected for 1 h at 37°C with serial 10-fold dilutions of FLUAV and SFV stocks in medium containing 2% fetal calf serum and 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.3). The virus inoculum was removed, and medium containing 2% fetal calf serum, 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.3), and 0.4% SeaPlaque GTG agarose (BioWhittaker Molecular Applications, Walkersville, ME) was added. Plates were further incubated for 3 days, agarose was removed, and cells were stained with a solution of 1% crystal violet, 3.6% formaldehyde, 1% methanol, and 20% ethanol.
Western blot analysis. Total cell extracts were prepared, samples were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and proteins were transferred to microporous polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Perkin Elmer, Boston, MA). HCV nonstructural proteins were specifically immunostained by the use of polyclonal rabbit antisera directed against NS3 (2), NS4B (35), NS5A (2), and NS5B (3).
Northern blot analysis. Details of this method have been described previously (34). Replicon and ß-actin RNAs were detected by using a 32P-labeled negative-sense riboprobe complementary to the neo gene and a riboprobe complementary to ß-actin mRNAs, respectively. HCV- and ß-actin-specific signals were quantified, and HCV signals were corrected for total RNA amounts loaded in each lane of the gel.
Immunofluorescence analysis. Cells grown on glass coverslips were fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde and permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100. Immunostaining was performed according to standard protocols. NS4B was detected by using a specific rabbit antiserum (35), and STAT1 was immunostained with a mouse monoclonal antibody recognizing the C terminus of the protein (BD Biosciences, San Diego, CA). Bound antibodies were visualized by using goat antibodies conjugated to the cyanine dye Alexa 488 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR). Cellular DNA was stained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindol dihydrochloride (DAPI; Molecular Probes).
Luciferase assays. Transient HCV RNA replication was determined by quantification of luciferase reporter activities as described previously (29). Briefly, 4 x 106 cells were transfected with 5 µg in vitro-transcribed RNA and resuspended in 12 ml culture medium, and 2-ml aliquots were seeded per well of a six-well plate for the determination of 4- and 24-h luciferase values. In case of 48- and 72-h values, only 1-ml aliquots were seeded to prevent the cells from becoming confluent before the time of harvest (subsequently, luciferase values were multiplied by a factor of 2).
RNA quantification by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). The HCV Con1 and JFH-1 RNA concentrations were determined by using the ABI PRISM 7000 Sequence Detector system (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) essentially as described previously by Vrolijk et al. (54) and Wakita et al. (55), respectively.
IFN-induced changes in the concentration of 15
different mRNA populations were quantified with the Rotor-Gene 2000
real-time amplification system (Corbett Research, Mortlake, Australia)
and the QuantiTect SYBR Green RT-PCR kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany).
Briefly, total RNA was isolated by using the reagent Trizol
(Invitrogen, Karlsruhe, Germany), following the manufacturer's
protocol. RNA was further purified with the RNeasy Mini Kit and the
RNase-free DNase Set (both from QIAGEN). For each PCR, 2 µl of
total RNA (20 to 200 ng) was added to a 23-µl RT-PCR mixture
containing a final primer and Mg2+ concentrations of
0.5 and 2.5 µM, respectively. Reactions were performed under
the following conditions: 30 min at 50°C for reverse
transcription; 15 min at 95°C for RT denaturation and
activation of the Taq polymerase; 35 to 40 cycles, each
consisting of 20 s at 95°C, 20 s at
55°C, 40 s at 72°C, and 15 s at
78°C. For each effector mRNA population, copy numbers were
normalized to the number of ß-actin transcripts. Note that
treatment with IFN-
and IFN-
did not change the
activity of the ß-actin gene in human hepatoma cells (data not
shown).
Database accession numbers. Effector gene-specific PCR primers were selected with the following database accession numbers: AI337069 (cig5), NM_005101.1 (G1P2), NM_022873.1 (G1P3), NM_002053.1 (GBP1),NM_004120.2 (GBP2), NM_005532.1 (IFI27), NM_001549.1 (IFIT4), NM_012420.1 (IFIT5), NM_ 001565.1 (IP10), NM_002462.1 (MxA), NM_002534.1 (OAS1), NM_002535.1 (OAS2), NM_002759.1 (PKR), NM_007315.1 (STAT1), and BC002704.1 (simSTAT1).
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FIG.1. HCV
RNA and protein synthesis in HuH6 Con1 replicons cells. Naive HuH6
cells were transfected via electroporation with a mixture of subgenomic
in vitro-transcribed Con1 replicons and subjected to G418 selection
(for details, see the text). Six cell clones were pooled and further
passaged. (A) HCV RNAs were detected by Northern hybridization to a
neo gene-specific riboprobe (lane 5). Different
amounts of in vitro transcripts were used as standards (lanes 1 to 3).
RNA isolated from naive HuH6 cells served as a negative control
(lane 4). The positions of replicon RNA and 28S rRNA
are indicated. (B) Detection of HCV protein expression by Western
blotting. Equal amounts of total cell lysates of HuH6 Con1 replicon
cells (lane 1) and naive control cells (lane 2) were separated by
sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and analyzed
by using antibodies with given specificities. (C) Detection of NS4B
protein expression by indirect immunofluorescence in HuH6 Con1 replicon
cells (top) and naive control cells (bottom). Cells were seeded onto
glass coverslips, cultured for 24 h, fixed, permeabilized,
and stained for NS4B (red) and DNA (turquoise) by using a specific
antibody and DAPI, respectively. Bars, 25
µm.
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2 (for details, see below). As with Huh-7 cells, we found
that individual cell culture-adaptive mutations and a combination of
two mutations in the NS3 coding region only slightly enhanced HCV
replication (Fig.
2A, gray columns), whereas certain combinatory
substitutions in NS3 and NS4B (ET) or NS3 and NS5A (5.1) had a much
stronger stimulatory effect (black columns). Interestingly, the order
of efficiency by which these adaptive mutations enhance HCV replication
in HuH6 cells exactly reflects the one previously observed with Huh-7
cells (32). To further
corroborate our findings, we analyzed the efficiency by which ET and
5.1 mutations enhanced HuH6 cell colony formation under the selective
pressure of G418. We calculated that the transfection of 5 µg
of the Con1 replicon I389/NS3-3'/ET and
I389/NS3-3'/5.1 resulted in the formation of
approximately 75 to 150 and 50 to 100 cell colonies, respectively (data
not shown). For comparison, we also transfected the cells with the
JFH-1 replicon I389Neo/NS3-3'/wt, a genotype 2a
replicon that has been shown to replicate in a variety of cell lines
(see below). This time, the transfection of 1 µg of in
vitro-transcribed replicon RNA yielded 600 to 700 colonies (data not
shown), suggesting that as with Huh-7 cells, JFH-1 replicons replicate
more efficiently than Con-1 replicons
(26).
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FIG. 2. Effect
of viral mutations on HCV RNA replication in HuH6 cells. (A) Effect of cell culture-adaptive mutations known to enhance Con1
replication in Huh-7 cells. Cured HuH6 replicon cells were transfected with in vitro-transcribed RNAs of I341PI-luc/NS3-3' Con1 replicons and seeded into multiple cell culture dishes. After 4 and 48 h, cells were lysed and replication was quantified by measuring the luciferase activities. To correct for different transfection efficiencies, the 4-h values were set to 100%, and percentages of corresponding 48-h values were calculated. Column colors indicate the absence of cell culture-adaptive mutations (white), their presence in the coding sequence of a single (gray), or two different viral proteins (black). wt, wild-type Con1 sequence; GND, replicon with an inactivating mutation in the GDD motif of NS5B; NS3, replicon with E1202G and T1280I mutations in the protease domain of NS3; NS4B, replicon with K1846T mutation in the center of NS4B; NS5A, replicon with the S2204I mutation in NS5A; NS3+4B, replicon with the ET combination of mutations in NS3 and 4B (E1202G, T1280I, and K1846T); NS3+5A, replicon with the 5.1 combination of mutations in NS3 and 5A (E1202G, T1280I, and S2204I). The result of a single representative experiment is shown. (B) Colony formation assay to analyze the effect of conserved mutations that had been identified in HuH6 cells after the transfection of the Con1 replicon I389Neo/NS3-3'/ET. Naive HuH6 cells were electroporated with in vitro-transcribed replicons that contained either the ET combination of adaptive mutations, an inactivating mutation in the GDD motif of NS5B, or the ET combination of adaptive mutations plus one of the newly identified nucleotide substitutions: T3472C (I1044T in NS3), A4531G (K1397R in NS3), C5474G (A1712V in NS4A), or C7754U (silent mutation in NS5B). After the transfection, cells were seeded in 10-cm dishes, cultured for 4 weeks in the presence of 800-µg/ml G418, cultured for 2 additional weeks in the presence of 500-µg/ml G418, fixed, and stained with Coomassie blue. The positions of nucleotide/amino acid exchanges cited above refer to those in the Con1 consensus genome (EMBL database accession number AJ238799).
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Increased permissiveness of cured HuH6 cells.
Huh-7 cells that once hosted HCV
replicons but later lost them due to antiviral treatments may more
readily support HCV replication than naive cells
(6,
15,
40). This observation
prompted us to propagate HuH6 Con1 replicon cells for a period of 4
weeks with 100-IU/ml IFN-
2, which was followed by an
additional incubation period of 2 weeks without the cytokine (to enable
the cells to restore normal gene expression). As a consequence, HCV RNA
levels dropped below Northern hybridization detection limits (data not
shown), but residual amounts of HCV RNAs could be detected by a more
sensitive assay (see below). Nevertheless, we analyzed the
permissiveness of cured HuH6 cells to newly transfected HCV RNAs in a
series of experiments. We first performed transient replication assays.
Cured HuH6 Con1 replicon cells and naive control cells were transfected
with in vitro-transcribed Con1 replicons encoding a luciferase
reporter, which allows a sensitive and precise quantification of HCV
RNA replication (16). At
several time points after transfection, cells were harvested and lysed,
and luciferase assays were performed. Based on the data shown in
Fig. 3A, we calculated the ratios between luciferase activities in cells with
replication-competent and -incompetent replicons. Throughout the time
course of the experiment, we found significantly higher values with
cured HuH6 Con1 replicon cells than with naive control cells.
Furthermore, significantly higher luciferase activities were measured
with cured HuH6 cells after the transfection of replication-incompetent
replicons than with naive control cells. Interestingly, this was also
observed with Huh-7 cells that had been cured by IFN-
2 or an
NS5B-specific antiviral compound (data not shown), suggesting that HCV
RNAs are more readily translated and/or less rapidly degraded in cured
cells.
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FIG. 3. Effect
of host cell determinants on HCV RNA replication. (A)
Transient Con1 replication in naive HuH6 cells and those cells that
once contained Con1 replicons but later lost them due to a treatment
with IFN- 2 (triangles and squares, respectively). Naive and
cured cells were transfected with the replication-competent Con1
replicon I341PI-luc/NS3-3'/ET (closed symbols) or
the inactive Con1 mutant I341PI-luc/NS3-3'/GND (open
symbols). After 4, 24, 48, and 72 h, cells were lysed and
luciferase activities were determined. Values were corrected for
different transfection efficiencies by using the 4-h measurements. The
result of a single representative experiment is shown. RLU, relative
light units. (B) Transient replication of JFH-1 and Con1
replicons in cured HuH6 cells. Cells were transfected with the in
vitro-transcribed JFH-1 replicons I389Neo/NS3-3' and
I389Neo/NS3-3'/ GDD (closed and open
circles, respectively) or the Con1 replicons
I341PI-luc/NS3-3'/ET and
I341PI-luc/NS3-3'/GND (closed and open squares,
respectively). The result of a single representative experiment is
shown. RLU, relative light units. (C) Cell colony formation
after transfection of Con1 replicons into naive and cured HuH6 cells
(top and bottom, respectively). Cells were transfected with in
vitro-transcribed RNAs of the Con1 replicons
I389Neo/NS3-3'/ET and
I389Neo/NS3-3'/ GDD or with total RNA of
HuH6 Con1 cells containing the replicon
I389Neo/NS3-3'/ET. In all cases, similar numbers of
HCV RNAs were transfected (109 replicon molecules, as
quantified by Northern hybridization). For comparison, cells were also
transfected with total RNA from naive HuH6 cells. Transfected cells
were seeded in 10-cm dishes, cultured for about 4 weeks in the presence
of 500-µg/ml G418, fixed, and stained with Coomassie
blue.
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Next, we performed a colony
formation assay in which naive and cured HuH6 cells were transfected
with in vitro-transcribed RNAs of the Con1 replicon
I389Neo/NS3-3'/ET or a replication-incompetent
mutant. Furthermore, cells were transfected with total RNA from HuH6
Con1 replicon cells (containing primarily
I389Neo/NS3-3'/ET progenies). Note that in all
cases, similar numbers of HCV RNA molecules were used. As a control, we
also transfected equivalent amounts of RNA that were isolated from
naive control cells. About 24 h after transfection, cells
were subjected to G418 selection; 4 weeks later,
colonies were fixed and stained (Fig.
3C). The unexpected
finding that cured HuH6 replicon cells formed G418-resistent colonies
after the transfection of replication-defective replicons and total RNA
from naive HuH6 cells indicated the presence of HCV RNAs that had
survived the previous treatment with IFN-
2. To exclude that
the observed G418 resistance of cured HuH6 replicon cells was due to
the integration of residual template DNA into the host cell genome, we
performed a neo-specific PCR. In a pool of >200
G418-resistent HuH6 replicon cell colonies, we could not detect any
neo DNA (data not shown), suggesting that G418 resistance in
these cells was indeed conferred by surviving HCV replicons. This is
remarkable because a similar IFN-
treatment was sufficient to
almost completely cure Huh-7 cells from HCV RNAs (data not
shown).
With naive HuH6 cells, we observed similar numbers of cell colonies after transfection of I389Neo/NS3-3'/ET replicons, irrespective of whether the replicon RNAs were synthesized in vitro or in replicon cells. The colony size, however, was significantly larger after the transfection of total RNA from HuH6 Con1 replicon cells. The same was observed with cured HuH6 Con1 replicon cells but not when HuH6 cells were transfected with total RNA from Huh-7 replicon cells (data not shown). The transfection of HepG2 cells with total RNA from HuH6 replicon cells also resulted in the formation of unusually large colonies (data not shown). It is therefore tempting to speculate that cotransfected host cell mRNAs present in HuH6 Con1 replicons cells but not (or to a much smaller number) in naive HuH6 cells may have caused this effect. Alternatively, cell-type-specific adaptive mutations may exist only in a small proportion of replicons that escaped our attempt to identify such mutations through the sequencing of cDNA clones (see above). Finally, we cannot exclude the possibility that the HCV replication machinery produced replicon RNAs which initiated viral replication more efficiently than in vitro-transcribed RNAs.
HCV RNA replication in HuH6 is not cell growth dependent. A peculiarity of Huh-7 replicon cells is that viral RNA concentrations drop dramatically when cells become confluent (20, 45), a phenomenon that has been ascribed to a cell cycle-dependent activation of the HCV IRES (22). To determine the efficiency of HCV replication in nondividing HuH6 cells, we performed a time course experiment in which we followed HCV RNA concentration in a growing cell culture over the point of confluence. The Northern blot analysis shown in Fig. 4A and B revealed that subconfluent and confluent HuH6 Con1 replicon cells contained similar amounts of HCV RNAs. In an additional experiment, we blocked cell growth by roscovitine, a potent and selective inhibitor of cdc2 and certain other cyclin-dependent kinases (11, 38). As expected, a treatment with 20 µM roscovitine largely blocked proliferation of both HuH6 and Huh-7 replicon cells (data not shown). Furthermore, we observed that HCV RNA levels in HuH6 cells did not change during the experiment, whereas roscovitine-treated Huh-7 cells quickly lost their replicons (Fig. 4C and D, respectively).
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FIG. 4. HCV
RNA replication in nondividing HuH6 cells. (A) Detection of
positive-stranded HCV RNAs in a growing culture of HuH6 Con1 replicon
cells. Equal numbers of cells were seeded in multiple 10-cm cell
culture dishes and harvested at given time points. Total RNA was
prepared, and samples of 5 µg (each) were analyzed by Northern
hybridization to a riboprobe complementary to the neo gene or
to ß-actin mRNAs (lanes 5 to 12). Different amounts of in vitro
transcripts were used as standards (lanes 1 to 3). RNA isolated from
naive HuH6 cells served as a negative control
(lane 4). The positions of replicon RNA, 28S rRNA, and
ß-actin are indicated. (B) Comparison between the
number of HCV RNAs (squares) and cell number at the time of harvest
(diamonds). Prior to RNA preparation, HuH6 Con1 replicon cells were
trypsinized and counted, and the number of cells per 10-cm cell culture
dish was calculated. Hybridization signals of positive-stranded HCV
RNAs and ß-actin mRNAs shown in panel A were quantified and HCV
RNA copy numbers were corrected for loading differences. Note that HCV
copy and cell numbers are given in different log scales. The dotted
line indicates the transition from the exponential to the stationary
growth phase of the cell culture. (C and D) Detection of
positive-stranded HCV RNAs in roscovitine-treated HuH6 Con1 cells and
Huh-7 cells of clone 9-13, respectively. Equal numbers of cells were
seeded in multiple 10-cm cell culture dishes, treated with 20
µM roscovitine, and harvested at given time points. Total RNA
was prepared, and samples of 5 µg were analyzed by Northern
hybridization as described above. The positions of replicon RNA and
ß-actin are
indicated.
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FIG. 5. Inhibition
of HCV RNA replication by antiviral compounds. (A and B) Effect of a
nucleosidic, NS5B-specific inhibitor on the maintenance of HCV RNAs in
HuH6 Con1 cells and Huh-7 cells of clone 9-13, respectively. Cells were
seeded into multiple cell culture dishes; on the following day, the
culture medium was supplemented with 1 µM
2'-C-methyladenosine. At given time points, cells were
harvested, total RNA was prepared, and the number of HCV RNA copies was
determined by quantitative, real-time RT-PCR. The result of a single
representative experiment is shown. (C and D) Antiviral effect of a
nonnucleosidic, NS5B-specific inhibitor of HCV replication. The
experiment was performed and analyzed as described
above.
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IFN-
does not block HCV RNA replication in HuH6 cells.
The fact that replicons could be
removed from HuH6 replicon cells by IFN-
already implied that HCV
replication in these cells is sensitive to type I IFNs. To further
substantiate this finding, we determined the IFN-
sensitivity
of HCV replication in HuH6 in comparison to Huh-7 cells. To that end,
we incubated HuH6 Con1 replicon cells with various IFN-
2
concentrations ranging from 0.5 to 100 IU/ml. Three days later, total
RNA was prepared and replicon RNA copy numbers were determined by
quantitative, real-time RT-PCR. As expected, IFN-
2 reduced the
amount of HCV RNAs in a dose-dependent manner with a 50% inhibitory
concentration (IC50) of about 5 to 10 IU/ml
(Fig. 6A), which is similar to what has previously been described
for Huh-7 cells (5). Next,
we treated HuH6 Con1 replicons cells with IFN-
. Surprisingly,
even doses of up to 100 U/ml did not affect the HCV RNA copy number
(Fig. 6B).
This observation is at variance to the strong inhibitory activity of
IFN-
in Huh-7 cells
(9,
14). To determine whether
higher doses of IFN-
or longer incubation periods with the
cytokine were required to block replication in HuH6 cells, we first
performed a time course experiment. HuH6 Con1 replicon cells and Huh-7
cells of clone 9-13 (containing the Con1 replicon
I377Neo/NS3-3') were incubated with 1,000-IU/ml
IFN-
; at several time points after the start of treatment, the
number of replicon RNAs was determined by Northern hybridization (Fig.
6C and D). A
quantification of the hybridization signals revealed that the HCV RNA
copy number in HuH6 cells hardly changed during the course of the
experiment, whereas IFN-
reduced viral RNA levels in Huh-7
cells by >90%
(Fig. 6E).
Analogous results were obtained when HCV RNA levels were quantified by
real-time RT-PCR and cells were incubated for 96 h with
IFN-
(data not shown).
![]() View larger version (48K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 6. IFN-induced
inhibition of HCV RNA replication in HuH6 cells. (A and B) Antiviral
effect of different IFN- and IFN- concentrations.
HuH6 Con1 replicon cells were seeded into multiple cell culture dishes,
cultured for 24 h, and incubated with different IFN
concentrations (0, 0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, 25, 50, and 100 IU/ml).
After 72 h, total RNA was prepared and the number of HCV RNA
copies was determined by quantitative, real-time RT-PCR. Mean values
and standard deviations of six different quantifications are given. (C
and D) Northern blot analysis of HCV RNA levels in IFN-treated HuH6
Con1 replicon cells and Huh-7 cells of clone 9-13. Cells were seeded
into multiple cell culture dishes, cultivated for 24 h in
normal culture serum, and further cultivated in the presence of
1,000-IU/ml IFN- . Total RNA was prepared at given time points,
and 5-µg samples (lanes 1 to 5) were analyzed by using a
riboprobe complementary to the neo gene (top) or to
ß-actin mRNAs (bottom). Different amounts of in vitro
transcripts were used as standards (lanes 7 to 9). RNA isolated from
naive cells served as a negative control (lane 6). The positions
of
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resistance is a property of Con1
replicons only or holds true for replicons of different genotypes. A
genotype 2a replicon cell pool was established after transfection of
JFH-1 replicon I389Neo/NS3-3'/wt into naive HuH6
cells and the selection of
600 cell clones. As expected, an
IFN-
treatment purged the majority of JFH-1 replicons from
HuH6 cells (data not shown). However, when we incubated HuH6 JFH-1
replicon cells with 1,000-IU/ml IFN-
, we found that this
treatment did not result in significantly lower HCV RNA levels, even
after a 192-h treatment (Fig.
6F). In contrast, an
almost 2-log difference was observed between the HCV RNA copy numbers
of Huh-7 replicon cells that had been treated with IFN-
and
those that had been mock treated. The results demonstrate that the
resistance of HCV replicons in HuH6 to IFN-
is not a
short-term phenomenon and does not depend on the viral
genotype.
Antiviral response to IFN-
is not generally impaired in HuH6 cells.
IFNs exert most of their biological
functions through Jak/STAT signaling pathways. A key element in the
pathway elicited by IFN-
is the phosphorylation and nuclear
translocation of STAT1. In line with this, we found that
endoribonuclease-prepared small interfering RNA-mediated silencing of
STAT1 expression restores HCV replication in Huh-7 cells treated with
IFN-
(U. Zeuge and M. Frese, unpublished data).
Therefore, defective Jak/STAT signaling might well explain the
incompetence of HuH6 cells in inhibiting HCV replication upon
IFN-
stimulation. To analyze the integrity of the Jak/STAT
signaling pathway, naive HuH6 cells were treated for 24 h
with 1,000-IU/ml IFN-
, fixed, and analyzed by STAT1-specific
immunofluorescence staining. Clearly, the IFN-
treatment led
to an enhanced expression of STAT1, accumulating almost exclusively in
the nucleus (Fig.
7A), as was the case with Huh-7 cells (Fig.
7B). In a side-by-side
experiment, we treated both replicon cell lines with 1,000-IU/ml
IFN-
2, which in both cases also led to a nuclear accumulation
of STAT1 (data not shown). These results indicate that both HuH6 and
Huh-7 cells possess functional Jak/STAT signaling pathways.
![]() View larger version (41K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 7. Effect of IFN- on STAT1 expression and localization in HuH6 and Huh-7 cells. Naive HuH6 (A) and Huh-7 (B) cells were seeded onto glass coverslips, cultivated for 16 h in normal culture medium, and further incubated for 24 h in the absence of cytokines (left) or in the presence of 1,000-IU/ml IFN- (right). After fixation and permeabilization, cells were immunostained for STAT1. Bars, 25 µm.
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2 or
IFN-
for 24 h and measured the effect of this
treatment on the transcript concentrations of 15 IFN-regulated
genes by quantitative, real-time RT-PCR. Among these were genes
encoding constituents of intracellular signaling pathways (e.g.,
STAT1), effector proteins with antiviral activities (e.g., MxA, OAS,
and PKR), and a cytokine signaling at the interface between the innate
and adaptive immune system (IP10). In agreement with the enhanced
expression of STAT1 in IFN-treated HuH6 cells (Fig.
7), we found that both
IFNs enhanced the synthesis of STAT1 mRNAs and those of several other
IFN-regulated genes (Table 2). In addition, we analyzed Huh-7 cells for their cellular response to
IFN-
and IFN-
. A comparison of the IFN-induced
changes in the gene expression of HuH6 and Huh-7 cells revealed that
both cell lines showed a very similar response to IFNs, although some
differences existed (Table
2). For example, the
number of MxA and IP10 mRNAs was relatively low in HuH6 cells, whereas
the same cells contained an increased number of IFI-27 transcripts.
Given the different origin and history of both cell lines
(Table 1),
such differences are not unexpected and do not necessarily relate to
the inability of HuH6 cells to block HCV replication in response to
IFN-
(see Discussion for further information). |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Quantification of IFN-induced gene expression in naive HuH6 and Huh-7 cells
|
(MxA and OAS1), by IFN-
(GBP1 and IP10), or
by both IFN types (STAT1). Cells were treated with IFNs, and mRNA
levels were quantified 24 h later as described in the
previous paragraph. We observed that both replicon cell lines displayed
an IFN response very similar to that of naive cells (Table
3). In HuH6 cells with HCV replicons, however, we measured a slightly
increased baseline mRNA concentration for four out of five genes,
indicating that the presence of virus RNA and/or proteins did not
completely escape the attention of the cell's innate immune system.
Since the concentrations of some IFN-induced mRNAs peaked earlier than
24 h after IFN stimulation, we performed an additional
quantitative, real-time RT-PCR analysis in which we determined the
concentration of GBP1, G1P2, IFI-T4, OAS1, and STAT1 mRNAs in HuH6 and
Huh-7 cells with and without Con1 replicons. After 8 h of IFN
treatment, we measured sometimes higher concentrations of IFN-induced
mRNAs than we had detected after 24 h of treatment (for
details, see the supplemental material). Nevertheless, the outcome of
this experiment confirms that HuH6 cells possess intact IFN signaling
pathways. |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 3. Quantification
of IFN-induced gene expression in HuH6 cells with and without HCV
replicons
|
2 or IFN-
(each, 1,000 IU/ml) and challenged them with different concentrations
of variant FPV-B of FLUAV (family Orthomyxoviridae) or SFV
(family Togaviridae). Virus plaque inhibition assays revealed
that both IFNs inhibited the multiplication of these viruses in HuH6
cells, with IFN-
2 being more potent than IFN-
(Fig.
8A and
B). Huh-7 cells that were also included in the experiment were found to be
generally more susceptible to viral infections, and their IFN-induced
antiviral response to viruses unrelated to HCV was less effective than
that of HuH6 cells (Fig. 8C and
D). To corroborate these findings, we analyzed the
induction of an antiviral state by IFN-
2 and IFN-
in
HuH6 replicon cells. Similar to what has been described for naive
cells, both IFNs largely inhibited the multiplication of SFV (data not
shown). Taken together, the findings indicate a particular defect in
the IFN-induced antiviral response of HuH6 cells, which allows an
unhindered replication of HCV RNAs in the face of a seemingly
otherwise-uncompromised antiviral
state.
![]() View larger version (69K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 8. IFN-induced
inhibition of FLUAV and SFV multiplication in HuH6 and Huh-7 cells.
FLUAV (A) and SFV (B) plaque formation in HuH6
cells is shown. Semiconfluent monolayer cultures were incubated with
1,000-IU/ml IFN- or IFN- or were left untreated.
After 24 h, cells were infected with serial 10-fold dilutions
of stock virus, plaques were allowed to develop for 72 h
under soft agar, and remaining cells were fixed and stained with
crystal violet. For FLUAV (C) and SFV (D) plaque
formation in Huh-7 cells, the experiment was performed as described
above.
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In Huh-7 cells, adaptive mutations are an important prerequisite for efficient replication of Con1 RNAs (5, 34). Here, we show that the same is true for HuH6 cells. Wild-type Con1 replicons replicated poorly in HuH6 cells, but HCV replication could be enhanced by the introduction of mutations known to increase replication in Huh-7 cells. Even the order of efficiency by which these mutations enhanced HCV replication in HuH6 cells exactly reflects the one previously observed in Huh-7 cells (32). These findings suggest that HuH6 and Huh-7 cells provide a similar environment for HCV replication, a hypothesis that is in line with the fact that we failed to detect any cell-type-specific adaptive mutations in HuH6 Con1 cells.
On the other hand, remarkable differences exist in the ability of HuH6 and Huh-7 cells to support HCV replication in resting cells. It has previously been shown that HCV RNA levels rapidly decrease in confluent Huh-7 replicon cells (20, 45). In this paper, we report that subconfluent Huh-7 replicon cells which had been arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle also rapidly lost their HCV RNAs (Fig. 4C and D). These findings are consistent with the earlier observations of Honda and colleagues who reported that the HCV IRES activity in Huh-7 cells varied during the cell cycle (22). By using stably transfected cells that expressed a bicistronic reporter construct, the authors showed that HCV translation was greatest in the synthetic and mitotic phase of the cell cycle and lowest in the quiescent G0 phase of resting cells. These findings are in line with the more recent observation that an enhanced expression of the La protein or the polypyrimidine tract binding protein may not only correlate with regeneration of hepatocytes in chronic hepatitis C patients but may also stimulate HCV translation (23). Furthermore, it has been noted that confluent HeLa cells contain amounts of HCV RNAs similar to the amounts found in subconfluent ones (58), which has led to the hypothesis that HCV is able to replicate in resting cells. However, antiproliferating drugs have not been used to substantiate this speculation. Our finding that HCV RNA levels do not decrease in confluent HuH6 cells (which show a strong degree of contact inhibition) or those that have been arrested in G1 phase of the cell cycle strongly indicates that the persistence of HCV RNAs does not always require ongoing cell proliferation. It is generally assumed that hepatocytes are resting cells, raising the question of how HCV replication can be maintained if it is dependent on host cell growth. Since replication of HCV RNAs in HuH6 cells is cell growth independent, this cell line may reflect the in vivo situation more accurately than with Huh-7 cells. One might speculate that confluent HuH6 cells have larger nucleoside triphosphate pools than Huh-7 cells, which would imply that low nucleoside triphosphate concentrations restrict HCV RNA replication. It has indeed been demonstrated that high CTP and UTP levels are critical parameters for efficient HCV replication in Huh-7 cells (47a). Future experiments addressing the molecular basis for the observed difference between Huh-7 and HuH6 cells might reveal requirements for HCV RNA replication and maintenance that may provide us with new approaches for interviral intervention.
Another striking difference between HuH6
and Huh-7 cells relates to an apparent gap in the innate defense of
HuH6 cells. It has previously been demonstrated that both
IFN-
/ß and IFN-
efficiently terminate HCV
replication in Huh-7 cells
(5,
9,
13,
14,
42,
46). It is widely assumed
that IFNs exert most, if not all, of their direct antiviral activities
through the induction of effector proteins. Some of these are
preferentially induced by IFN-
/ß (e.g., Mx proteins),
IFN-
(e.g., GBP proteins), or by all IFNs (e.g., PKR). In
several publications, it has been suggested that PKR plays a prominent
role in IFN-induced inhibition of HCV replication, but these reports
are controversial (4).
Furthermore, it has been reported that HCV RNAs are sensitive to the
OAS/RNase L degradation pathway
(48) and to RNA editing
performed by an adenosine deaminase acting on RNA
(49), but details have
not yet been elucidated.
Based on the present finding that
IFN-
but not IFN-
inhibits HCV RNA replication in
HuH6 cells, one might speculate that the innate immune response against
HCV relies on more than one effector protein. According to the model
depicted in Fig.
9, IFN-
/ß and IFN-
would induce the expression
of different effector genes. While Huh-7 cells would possess a full set
of functional effector genes, mutations in the genome of HuH6 cells may
account for the inability of these cells to reduce the number of HCV
RNAs in response to IFN-
. For instance, mutations within a
critical effector gene may have destroyed its promoter sequence,
changed its coding sequence, or caused mRNA instability. In this
context, it is interesting to note that IFN-
induces
>100 fold the number of MxA mRNAs in Huh-7 than in HuH6 cells
(Table 3). MxA is a
cytoplasmic GTPase with strong antiviral activities against a variety
of positive- and negative-stranded RNA viruses
(21). However, it has
been shown that constitutive expression of MxA does not inhibit
subgenomic HCV replicons and that the expression of a dominant-negative
MxA mutant does not restore HCV replication during IFN-
treatment (13). These
earlier observations are in line with the present finding that
IFN-
inhibits HCV replication in Huh-7 and HuH6 cells with a
similar IC50 (3 to 5 and 5 to 10 IU/ml, respectively),
although the former synthesizes nearly 75-fold-more MxA mRNAs in
response to IFN-
than the latter (Table
3).
![]() View larger version (38K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 9. Model
for the IFN-induced effector gene expression of HuH6 cells. The binding
of IFN- and IFN- to their corresponding cell surface
receptors (IFN- receptor [IFNGR] and IFN- receptor
[IFNAR], respectively) results in the phosphorylation and
nuclear translocation of latent transcription factor complexes
(IFN-stimulated gene factor 3 [ISGF-3] and gamma activation factor
[GAF], respectively). In the case of IFN- , a heterotrimer
consisting of STAT1, STAT2, and p48 activates gene promoters containing
one or more IFN-stimulated response elements ISREs. In the case of
IFN- , a STAT1 homodimer activates gene transcription by
binding to the gamma activation site (GAS). Crosses indicate potential
mutations in the genome of HuH6 cells (see the text for further
details).
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and IFN-
induce the
expression of different effector proteins, it is also possible that the
innate immune response in humans relies on a single HCV-specific
effector that is expressed in response to both types of IFNs. In this
case, however, it must be postulated that the genome of HuH6 cells
carries a mutation in the promoter region of that effector gene which
would specifically affect its responsiveness to IFN-
.
According to another model, HuH6 and Huh-7 cells may express a similar
or even identical set of IFN-induced effector proteins, targeting at
least two different steps of the viral life cycle. Such a scenario
would imply that IFN-
targets a viral replication step that
somehow is less accessible to effector proteins. Interestingly, HuH6
replicon cells showed a delayed response to two different
nonnucleosidic, NS5B-specific antiviral compounds, which might be a
consequence of highly compact or otherwise shielded viral replication
complexes. Further studies are required to determine why HuH6 cells
cannot purge themselves from HCV RNAs in response to IFN-
. To
determine whether the cells are impaired in the expression of a pivotal
IFN-induced effector gene, we performed a detailed transcriptome
analysis by using cDNA microarrays. The data are currently being
screened for effector transcripts that are differentially expressed in
HuH6 and Huh-7 cells.
Taken together, HuH6 cells represent a
valuable new host cell line for HCV replicons. Compared to Huh-7 cells,
HCV RNA replication in HuH6 cells follows some unexpected rules. First,
viral RNA levels do not decrease in confluent cells or in those that
had been treated with a cell cycle inhibitor. Second, HCV replication
is less sensitive to certain antiviral compounds, which may enable
critical drug reevaluations. Third, IFN-
does not inhibit HCV
replication. Thus, HuH6 cells provide an environment in which HCV RNAs
can persist despite drastic changes in host cell metabolism. In this
context, it is interesting to mention that HuH6 cells are not the only
ones unable to inhibit HCV replication in response to IFN-
. We
recently established persistent JFH-1 replication in HeLa, HepG2, and
WRL-68 cells (WRL-68 cells are a human embryonic hepatocarcinoma cell
line). In a first series of experiments, we found that HeLa and HepG2
cells were unable to inhibit HCV replication after IFN-
stimulation, whereas WRL-68 cells behaved like Huh-7 cells and
efficiently blocked HCV replication in a dose-dependent manner with an
IC50 of approximately 1 IU/ml (unpublished data).
Experiments to determine the molecular basis for the observed
differences in the IFN-
sensitivity of HCV replication in the
different cell lines are under way.
This work was supported by grants from the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (Kompetenznetz Hepatitis, Teilprojekt 13.2, 13.4, and 15.4) and the VIRGIL European Network of Excellence on Antiviral Drug Resistance (LSHM-CT-2004-503359).
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jvi.asm.org/. ![]()
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inhibits hepatitis C virus
subgenomic RNA replication by an MxA-independent pathway.J. Gen. Virol.
82:723-733.
inhibits replication of subgenomic and genomic
hepatitis C virus RNAs. Hepatology
35:694-703.[CrossRef][Medline]
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