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Journal of Virology, August 2001, p. 7651-7661, Vol. 75, No. 16
Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, North
Melbourne, Victoria 3051,1 Department of
Pathology, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria
3010,2 Austin and Repatriation Medical
Centre, Heidelberg, Victoria 3084,3 and
Department of Medicine, Western Hospital, Footscray,
Victoria 3011,4 Australia
Received 11 September 2000/Accepted 17 May 2001
Primary cultures of intrahepatic bile duct epithelial (IBDE) cells
isolated from duckling livers were successfully grown for studies of
duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV). The primary IBDE cells were
characterized by immunohistochemistry using CAM 5.2, a cytokeratin marker which was shown to react specifically to IBDE cells in duck
liver tissue sections and in primary cultures of total duck liver
cells. Immunofluorescence assay using anti-duck albumin, a marker for
hepatocytes, revealed that these IBDE cultures did not appear to
contain hepatocytes. A striking feature of these cultures was the
duct-like structures present within each cell colony of multilayered
IBDE cells. Normal duck serum in the growth medium was found to be
essential for the development of these cells into duct-like structures.
When the primary cultures of duck IBDE cells were acutely infected with
DHBV, dual-labeled confocal microscopy using a combination of anti-DHBV
core proteins and CAM 5.2 or a combination of anti-pre-S1 proteins and
CAM 5.2 revealed that the IBDE cell colonies contained DHBV proteins. Immunoblot analysis of these cells showed that the DHBV pre-S1 and core
proteins were similar to their counterparts in infected primary duck
hepatocyte cultures. Southern blot analysis of infected IBDE
preparations using a digoxigenin-labeled positive-sense DHBV riboprobe
revealed the presence of hepadnavirus covalently closed circular (CCC)
DNA, minus-sense single-stranded (SS) DNA , double-stranded linear DNA,
and relaxed circular DNA. The presence of minus-sense SS DNA in the
acutely infected IBDE cultures is indicative of DHBV reverse
transcriptase activity, while the establishment of a pool of viral CCC
DNA reveals the ability of these cells to maintain persistent
infection. Taken collectively, the results from this study demonstrated
that primary duck IBDE cells supported hepadnavirus replication as
shown by the de novo synthesis of DHBV proteins and DNA replicative intermediates.
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.16.7651-7661.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Duck Hepatitis B Virus Replication in Primary Bile
Duct Epithelial Cells
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Victorian
Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, Locked Bag 815, Carlton
South, Victoria, Australia, 3053. Phone: 61-3-9342 2604. Fax: 61-3-9342 2666. E-mail: jia-yee.lee{at}mh.org.au.
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