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Journal of Virology, April 2001, p. 3811-3818, Vol. 75, No. 8
Institut für
Virologie1 and Zentrales
Tierlaboratorium,2 Universitätsklinikum
Essen, 45122 Essen, Germany
Received 14 September 2000/Accepted 25 January 2001
Woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) mutants with core internal
deletions (CID) occur naturally in chronically WHV-infected woodchucks, as do hepatitis B virus mutants in humans. We studied the replication of WHV deletion mutants in primary woodchuck hepatocyte cultures and in
vivo after transmission to naive woodchucks. By screening 14 wild-caught, chronically WHV-infected woodchucks, two woodchucks, WH69
and WH70, were found to harbor WHV CID mutants. Consistent with
previous results, WHV CID mutants from both animals had deletions of
variable lengths (90 to 135 bp) within the middle of the WHV core gene.
In woodchuck WH69, WHV CID mutants represented a predominant fraction
of the viral population in sera, normal liver tissues, and to a lesser
extent, in liver tumor tissues. In primary hepatocytes of WH69, the
replication of wild-type WHV and CID mutants was maintained at least
for 7 days. Although WHV CID mutants were predominant in fractions of
cellular WHV replicative intermediates, mutant covalently closed
circular DNAs (cccDNAs) appeared to be a small part of cccDNA-enriched
fractions. Analysis of cccDNA-enriched fractions from liver tissues of
other woodchucks confirmed that mutant cccDNA represents only a small
fraction of the total cccDNA pool. Four naive woodchucks were
inoculated with sera from woodchuck WH69 or WH70 containing WHV CID
mutants. All four woodchucks developed viremia after 3 to 4 weeks
postinoculation (p.i.). They developed anti-WHV core antigen (WHcAg)
antibody, lymphoproliferative response to WHcAg, and anti-WHV surface
antigen. Only wild-type WHV, but no CID mutant, was found in sera from
these woodchucks. The WHV CID mutant was also not identified in liver
tissue from one woodchuck sacrificed in week 7 p.i. Three
remaining woodchucks cleared WHV. Thus, the presence of WHV CID mutants
in the inocula did not significantly change the course of acute
self-limiting WHV infection. Our results indicate that the replication
of WHV CID mutants might require some specific selective conditions.
Further investigations on WHV CID mutants will allow us to have more
insight into hepadnavirus replication.
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.8.3811-3818.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Replication of Naturally Occurring Woodchuck
Hepatitis Virus Deletion Mutants in Primary Hepatocyte Cultures and
after Transmission to Naive Woodchucks
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut
für Virologie, Universitätsklinikum Essen, Hufelandstrasse
55, 45122 Essen, Germany. Phone: 49 201 7233530. Fax: 49 201 7235929. E-mail: mengji.lu{at}uni-essen.de.
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