A mutation in the hepatitis e virus RNA polymerase promotes its replication and associates with ribavirin treatment failure in organ transplant recipients

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Abstract

We analyzed blood samples collected from 15 patients with chronic hepatitis E who were recipients of solid-organ transplants. All patients cleared the hepatitis E virus (HEV) except for 2 (nonresponders); 1 patient died. A G1634R mutation in viral polymerase was detected in the HEV RNA of the nonresponders; this mutation did not provide the virus with resistance to ribavirin in vitro. However, the mutant form of a subgenomic replicon of genotype 3 HEV replicated more efficiently in vitro than HEV without this mutation, and the same was true for infectious virus, including in competition assays. Similar results were obtained for genotype 1 HEV. The G1634R mutation therefore appears to increase the replicative capacity of HEV in the human liver and hence reduce the efficacy of ribavirin.

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Debing, Y., Gisa, A., Dallmeier, K., Pischke, S., Bremer, B., Manns, M., … Neyts, J. (2014). A mutation in the hepatitis e virus RNA polymerase promotes its replication and associates with ribavirin treatment failure in organ transplant recipients. Gastroenterology, 147(5), 1008-1011.e7. https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2014.08.040

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