Claudin‐1, miR‐122 and apolipoprotein E transductions improve the permissivity of SNU‐182, SNU‐398 and SNU‐449 hepatoma cells to hepatitis C virus

2018 
Summary Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a human hepatotropic virus but many hepatoma cell lines are not permissive to this virus. In a previous study, we observed that SNU-182, SNU-398 and SNU-449 hepatoma cell lines were non-permissive to HCV. In order to understand the non-permissivity, we evaluated the ability of each cell line to support the different steps of HCV life cycle (entry, replication and production of infectious particles). Using retroviral pseudoparticles pseudotyped with HCV envelope proteins and recombinant HCV produced in cell culture, we observed that low level or absence of claudin-1 expression limited the viral entry process in SNU-182 and SNU-398 cells, respectively. Our results also showed that supplementation of the three cell lines with miR-122 partly restored the replication of a JFH1 HCV replicon. Finally, we observed that expression of apolipoprotein E was very low or undetectable in the three cell lines and that its ectopic expression permits the production of infectious viral particles in SNU-182 and SNU-398 cells but not in SNU-449 cells. Nevertheless, the supplementation of SNU-182, SNU-398 and SNU-449 cells with claudin-1, miR-122 and apolipoprotein E was not sufficient to render these cells as permissive as HuH-7 cells. Thus, these cell lines could serve as cell culture models for functional studies on the role of claudin-1, miR-122 and apolipoprotein E in HCV life cycle but also for the identification of new restriction and/or dependency host factors essential for HCV infection. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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