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The Committee on Microbiology - Paper of the week
Cullular cofactors affecting hepatitis C virus
infection and replication.
Randall, G., M. Panis,
T.L. Tellinghuisen, J.D. Cooper, K.E. Soukhodolets, S. Pfeffer, M.
Landthaler, P. Landgraf, S. Kan, B.D. Lindenbach, M. Chien, D.B.
Weir, J.J. Russo, J. Ju, M.J. Brownstein, R. Sheridan, C. Sander,
M. Zavolan, T. Tuschl, & C.M. Rice.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 104(31):12884-89. 2007.
Recently identified hepatitis C virus (HCV) isolates
that are infectious in cell culture provide a genetic system to
evaluate the significance of virus– host interactions for HCV
replication. We have completed a systematic RNAi screen wherein siRNAs
were designed that target 62 host genes encoding proteins that
physically interact with HCV RNA or proteins or belong to cellular
pathways thought to modulate HCV infection. This includes 10 host
proteins that we identify in this study to bind HCV NS5A. siRNAs that
target 26 of these host genes alter infectious HCV production
>3-fold. Included in this set of 26 were siRNAs that target Dicer, a
principal component of the RNAi silencing pathway. Contrary to the
hypothesis that RNAi is an antiviral pathway in mammals, as has been
reported for subgenomic HCV replicons, siRNAs that target Dicer
inhibited HCV replication. Furthermore, siRNAs that target several
other components of the RNAi pathway also inhibit HCV
replication. MicroRNA profiling of human liver, human hepatoma
Huh-7.5 cells, and Huh-7.5 cells that harbor replicating HCV
demonstrated that miR-122 is the predominant microRNA in each
environment. miR-122 has been previously implicated in positively
regulating the replication of HCV genotype 1 replicons. We find
that 2-O-methyl antisense oligonucleotide depletion of miR-122 also
inhibits HCV genotype 2a replication and infectious virus production.
Our data define 26 host genes that modulate HCV infection and indicate
that the requirement for functional RNAi for HCV replication is
dominant over any antiviral activity this pathway may exert against HCV.
Link
to full text.
Committee on Microbiology, Department of Microbiology,
The University of Chicago, 920 East 58th Street, Chicago, IL 60637,
USA.
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