Background. The hepatitis C virus (HCV) core protein is implicated in diverse aspects of HCV-induced pathogenesis. There is a paucity of information on core in acute hepatitis C infection. Methods. We analyzed core gene sequences and protein functions from 13 patients acutely infected with HCV genotype 1. Results. Although core isolates differed slightly between patients, core quasispecies were relatively homogeneous within each patient. In 2 of 4 patients studied temporally, core quasispecies did not change over time. Comparison with more than 2700 published core isolates indicated that amino acid changes from a prototype reference strain found in acute core isolates were present in chronically infected persons at low frequency (6.4%; range, 0%-32%). Core isolates associated with lipid droplets to similar degrees in Huh7 cells. Core diffusion in cells was not affected by nonconservative changes F130L and G161S in the lipid targeting domain of core. Core isolates inhibited interferon-stimulated response element- and nuclear factor kB-dependent transcription and tumor necrosis factor α-induced nuclear translocation of nuclear factor kB and were also secreted from Huh7 cells. Conclusions. The data suggest that upon transmission, core quasispecies undergo genetic homogenization associated with amino acid changes that are rarely found in chronic infection and that, despite genetic variation, acute core isolates retain similar functions in vitro. © 2010 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Tang, X., Wagoner, J., Negash, A., Austin, M., McLauchlan, J., Hahn, Y. S., … Polyak, S. J. (2010). Functional characterization of core genes from patients with acute hepatitis C virus infection. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 201(6), 912–922. https://doi.org/10.1086/650699
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