Efficient Virus Assembly, but Not Infectivity, Determines the Magnitude of Hepatitis C Virus-Induced Interferon Alpha Responses of Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells

2015 
Worldwide, approximately 160 million people are chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), seven distinct genotypes of which are discriminated. The hallmarks of HCV are its genetic variability and the divergent courses of hepatitis C progression in patients. We assessed whether intragenotypic HCV variations would differentially trigger host innate immunity. To this end, we stimulated human primary plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) with crude preparations of different cell culture-derived genotype 2a HCV variants. Parental Japanese fulminant hepatitis C virus (JFH1) did not induce interferon alpha (IFN-), whereas the intragenotypic chimera Jc1 triggered massive IFN-responses. Purified Jc1 retained full infectivity but no longer induced IFN-. Coculture of pDC with HCV-infected hepatoma cells retrieved the capacity to induce IFN-, whereas Jc1-infected cells triggered stronger responses than JFH1-infected cells. Since the infectivity of virus particles did not seem to affect pDC activation, we next tested Jc1 mutants that were arrested at different stages of particle assembly. These experiments revealed that efficient assembly and core protein envelopment were critically needed to trigger IFN-. Of note, sequences within domain 2 of the core that vitally affect virus assembly also crucially influenced the IFN-responses of pDC. These data showed that viral determinants shaped host innate IFN-responses to HCV. IMPORTANCE
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