Antiviral Effect of Ribavirin against HCV Associated with Increased Frequency of G-To-A and C-To-U Transitions in Infectious Cell Culture Model

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Abstract

Ribavirin (RBV) is a broad-spectrum antiviral active against a wide range of RNA viruses. Despite having been used for decades in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, the precise mechanism of action of RBV is unknown. In other viruses, it inhibits propagation by increasing the rate of G-To-A and C-To-U transitions. Here, we utilized the J6/JFH1 HCV cell-culture system to investigate whether RBV inhibits HCV through the same mechanism. Infected Huh7.5 cells were treated with increasing concentrations of RBV or its phosphorylated forms. A fragment of the HCV NS5B-polymerase gene was amplified, cloned, and sequenced to estimate genetic distances. We confirm that the antiviral effect of all three RBV-drug forms on HCV relies on induction of specific transitions (G-To-A and C-To-U). These mutations lead to generation of non-infectious virions, reflected by decreased spread of HCV in cell culture despite relatively limited effect on virus genome titers. Moreover, treatment experiments conducted on a novel Huh7.5 cell line stably overexpressing adenosine kinase, a key enzyme for RBV activation, yielded comparable results. This study indicates that RBV action on HCV in hepatoma cell-culture is exerted through increase in mutagenesis, mediated by RBV triphosphate, and leading to production of non-infectious viruses.

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Galli, A., Mens, H., Gottwein, J. M., Gerstoft, J., & Bukh, J. (2018). Antiviral Effect of Ribavirin against HCV Associated with Increased Frequency of G-To-A and C-To-U Transitions in Infectious Cell Culture Model. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-22620-2

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