Abstract
Chimpanzees represent the only animal model for studies of the natural history of hepatitis C virus (HCV). To generate virus stocks of important HCV variants, we infected chimpanzees with HCV strains of genotypes 1-6 and determined the infectivity titer of acute-phase plasma pools in additional animals. The courses of first- and second-passage infections were similar, with early appearance of viremia, HCV RNA titers of >104.7 IU/mL, and development of acute hepatitis; the chronicity rate was 56%. The challenge pools had titers of 103-105 chimpanzee infectious doses/mL. Human liver-chimeric mice developed high-titer infections after inoculation with the challenge viruses of genotypes 1-6. Inoculation studies with different doses of the genotype lb pool suggested that a relatively high virus dose is required to consistently infect chimeric mice. The challenge pools represent a unique resource for studies of HCV molecular virology and for studies of pathogenesis, protective immunity, and vaccine efficacy in vivo. © 2010 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Bukh, J., Meuleman, P., Tellier, R., Engle, R. E., Feinstone, S. M., Eder, G., … Purcell, R. H. (2010). Challenge pools of hepatitis C virus genotypes 1-6 prototype strains: Replication fitness and pathogenicity in chimpanzees and human liver-chimeric mouse models. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 201(9), 1381–1389. https://doi.org/10.1086/651579
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.