Replication of human hepatitis delta virus in primary cultures of woodchuck hepatocytes

  • Taylor J
  • Mason W
  • Summers J
  • et al.
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Abstract

We obtained two lines of evidence that monolayer cultures of primary woodchuck hepatocytes support replication of the genome of human hepatitis delta virus (HDV). (i) From a Northern (RNA blot) analysis of the HDV-related RNA in infected cultures, both genomic and antigenomic 1.7-kilobase RNA species were detected at 11 days after infection. The ratio of genomic RNA to antigenomic RNA was 2:1 to 10:1, comparable to that previously reported in studies of experimentally infected chimpanzees and woodchucks. (ii) Replication in culture was also demonstrated by in situ hybridization with a strand-specific probe. Such studies showed that only a small fraction of the cultured cells supported replication and that in such cells the relative and absolute levels of the HDV RNAs were comparable to those in liver cells infected in vivo. Furthermore, as with the in vivo studies, the HDV RNAs were predominantly localized to the nucleus. In summary, we demonstrated that cultured cells supported both the early events of HDV adsorption and penetration and the intermediate events of genome replication.

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APA

Taylor, J., Mason, W., Summers, J., Goldberg, J., Aldrich, C., Coates, L., … Gowans, E. (1987). Replication of human hepatitis delta virus in primary cultures of woodchuck hepatocytes. Journal of Virology, 61(9), 2891–2895. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.61.9.2891-2895.1987

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