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Genetically humanised mice could boost fight against aggressive hepatitis
HDV is small, RNA-based ‘satellite' virus that produces single protein of its own
Published in Daily News Egypt on 27 - 06 - 2018

Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) causes the most aggressive form of viral hepatitis in humans, putting at least 20 million people worldwide at risk of developing liver fibrosis, cirrhosis, and liver cancer. Efforts to develop effective treatments against HDV have been hampered by the fact that laboratory mice are not susceptible to the virus. But a new study published recently in the journal Science Translational Medicine, Alexander Ploss and colleagues described a genetically humanised mouse that can be persistently infected with HDV.
HDV is a small, RNA-based “satellite” virus that produces just a single protein of its own and therefore requires additional proteins provided by another liver virus, hepatitis B virus (HBV). HDV can infect patients already carrying HBV, or both viruses can infect patients simultaneously. Though infections can be prevented with an anti-HBV vaccine, there are no antiviral therapies available to cure existing HDV infections.
HDV and HBV infect the liver by binding to a protein called NTCP that is present on the surface of liver cells. But the viruses only recognise the version of NTCP present in humans and a few other primates, and therefore cannot infect mice or other small mammals that produce their own versions of NTCP. This has made it difficult to study HBV and HDV infections in the laboratory. Researchers have tried transplanting human liver cells into immunocompromised mice before infecting them with a virus, but this approach has produced inconsistent results and is both expensive and time-consuming.
Ploss and colleagues, led by graduate student Benjamin Winer, took a different approach. They generated mice that express the human NTCP protein in their liver cells, allowing these cells to be infected by HBV and HDV.
In these mice, HBV failed to replicate after entering mouse liver cells but HDV was able to establish persistent infection when provided with the HBV proteins it needs to propagate. For example, mice genetically engineered to produce both human NTCP and the entire HBV genome could be infected with HDV for up to 14 days. “To our knowledge, this is the first time the entire HDV life cycle has been recapitulated in a mouse model with inheritable susceptibility to HDV,” Ploss said.
The mice were able to rid themselves of HDV before they developed any liver damage, apparently by mounting an immune response involving antiviral interferon proteins and various white blood cell types, including natural killer (NK) cells and T cells. Accordingly, mice expressing human NTCP and the HBV genome but lacking functional B, T, and NK cells could be infected with HDV for two months or more.
These immunocompromised animals allowed the research team to test the effectiveness of two drugs that are currently being developed as treatments for HDV infection. Both drugs—either alone or in combination—suppressed the levels of HDV in immunocompromised mice after viral infection. But the drugs were not able to completely clear the mice of HDV; viral levels rose again within weeks of stopping treatment.
“This is largely in line with recently reported data from clinical trials, showing the utility of our model for preclinical antiviral drug testing,” Winer said. “Our model is amenable to genetic manipulations, robust, and can be adopted as a method to rapidly screen for potential treatments.”
Timothy M Block, president of the Hepatitis B Foundation and its Baruch S Blumberg Institute, who was not involved in the study, said, “these systems should be able to provide practical, and presumably economical tools. Their work is urgently needed, and a desperate community welcomes it. I emphasise that it is often the new methods in science that revolutionise a field such as drug discovery, almost as much as the new drugs themselves.”


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