Project description:Covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) forms the basis for replication and persistence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) in the chronically infected liver. In this study we sought to identify host factors interacting with the HBV genome. Nucleolin (Ncl) was identified as a potential interactor of HBV cccDNA. This interaction was veriefied using an established ChIPseq protocol. The data show that Ncl binds cccDNA albeit at lower levels than HBcAg. Ncl deposition occurs across the genome without a clear localization and a variable pattern of deposition between experiments. This verifies the interaction of Ncl with HBV-cccDNA.
Project description:Background & Aims: Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major health burden worldwide and currently there is no cure. The persistence of HBV covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) is the major obstacle for antiviral treatment. HBV core protein (HBc) has merged as a promising antiviral target, as it plays important roles in critical steps of viral life cycle. However, whether HBc could regulate HBV cccDNA transcription remains to be illustrated. Methods: Synthesized HBV cccDNA and HBVcircle with or without HBc deficiency were transfected into hepatocytes. A recently reported Adeno-Associated Virus (AAV) mediated HBV cccDNA mouse model was employed. Two capsid assembly modulators (CAMs) were used. HBV replication markers were evaluated. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) or ChIP sequencing assays were conducted with different transcription factors, histones and RNA polymerase 2. Results: In HBV cccDNA and HBVcircle transfection assays, lack of HBc showed no effect on transcription of HBV RNA as well as HBV surface antigen production. Reconstitution of HBc did not change cccDNA derived HBV markers. Similar results were obtained in vivo, from mouse cccDNA model. ChIP data revealed similar transcription regulation of HBc deficient cccDNA chromatin with wide type cccDNA. Furthermore, CAMs treatment could not alter cccDNA transcription. Conclusions: Our results indicate that HBc neither affects histone modifications and transcription factors binding of cccDNA, nor influences cccDNA transcription. Although CAMs could reduce HBc binding to cccDNA, it does not suppress cccDNA transcriptional activity. Thus, therapeutic targeting capsid or HBc is not sufficient to reduce cccDNA transcription.
Project description:Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection affects 240 million people worldwide and is a major risk factor for liver failure and hepatocellular carcinoma. Current antiviral therapy inhibits cytoplasmic HBV genomic replication, but is not curative since it does not eliminate nuclear HBV cccDNA, the genomic form that templates viral transcription and sustains viral persistence. Novel approaches that directly target the transcriptional regulation of cccDNA would therefore be highly desirable. cccDNA is assembled with cellular histone proteins into chromatin, but little is known about the regulation of HBV chromatin by histone posttranslational modifications (PTMs). Here, using a new cccDNA ChIP-Seq approach, we report the first genome-wide maps of PTMs in cccDNA-containing chromatin from de novo infected HepG2 cells, primary human hepatocytes and from HBV infected liver tissue. We find high levels of PTMs associated with active transcription enriched at specific sites within the HBV genome, and surprisingly very low levels of PTMs linked to transcriptional repression even at silent HBV promoters. We show that transcription and active PTMs in HBV chromatin are reduced by the activation of an innate immunity pathway, and that this can be recapitulated with a small molecule epigenetic modifying agent, opening the possibility that chromatin-based regulation of cccDNA transcription could be a new therapeutic approach to chronic HBV infection.
Project description:Chronic infection of Hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains a public health problem worldwide. HBV infection relies on the persistence of covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) in the nucleus and actively cccDNA transcription. To understand HBV cccDNA transcription regulation at single cell level, we isolated primary human hepatocytes from liver humanized FRG mice infected by one or more (two or three) HBV genotypes, and we quantified transcripts of HBV structural genes in single cells. HBV transcripts were ascribed to the transcription of individual HBV genes by 5’ end sequencing thus avoiding the ambiguity caused by the overlap of viral genome coding at the 3’ ends. Transcripts from different cccDNA in single cells were separated according to the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) among different HBV genotypes. We found that the transcription of HBV follows “all-or-none” pattern in single cells: either all of the individual cccDNA molecules actively transcribe simultaneously, or, none of them generates transcripts of the structural genes. In vitro cell infection assays with recombinant HBV are consistent with the sequencing results of ex vivo samples from natural HBV infection, and also confirm that such a pattern is apparently controlled by the expression of HBx protein. These results strongly support a synchronized transcription model of HBV cccDNA molecules in single hepatocytes, and provide new insight helpful for developing HBV cure strategy.
Project description:Hepatitis B virus (HBV) persists by depositing a covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) in the nucleus of infected cells that cannot be targeted by available antivirals. Cytokine treatments can diminish HBV cccDNA via APOBEC3-mediated deamination. Here we show that overexpression of APOBEC3A alone, however, was not sufficient to reduce cccDNA in HBV-infected cells. This required addition of interferon indicating that cccDNA degradation requires an additional, interferon-stimulated gene (ISG). Transcriptome analyses identified ISG20 as the only type I and II interferon-induced, nucleus-resident protein with annotated nuclease activity. ISG20 expression was detected in human livers in acute, self-limiting but not in chronic hepatitis B. ISG20 depletion abolished the interferon-induced loss of cccDNA, and co-expression of ISG20 and APOBEC3A was sufficient to diminish cccDNA. In conclusion, non-cytolytic HBV cccDNA decline requires induction of a deaminase and nuclease. Our findings highlight that ISGs cooperate for their antiviral function and this cooperativity may be explored for therapeutic targeting.
Project description:Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) is a small DNA virus that replicates via an episomal covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) that serves as the transcriptional template for viral mRNAs. The host protein, CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF), is a key regulator of cellular transcription by maintaining epigenetic boundaries, nucleosome phasing, stabilisation of long-range chromatin loops and directing alternative exon splicing. We previously reported that CTCF binds two conserved motifs within Enhancer I of the HBV genome and represses viral transcripts, however, the underlying mechanisms were not identified. We show that CTCF depletion in cells harbouring cccDNA-like HBV molecules and in de novo infected cells resulted in an increase in spliced transcripts, which was most notable in the abundant SP1 spliced transcript. In contrast, depletion of CTCF in cell lines with integrated HBV DNA had no effect on the abundance of viral transcripts and in line with this observation there was limited evidence for CTCF binding to viral integrants, suggesting that CTCF-regulation of HBV transcription is specific to episomal cccDNA. Analysis of HBV chromatin topology by Assay for Transposase Accessibility/sequencing (ATAC-Seq) revealed an accessible region spanning Enhancers I and II and the basal core promoter (BCP). Mutating the CTCF binding sites within Enhancer I resulted in a dramatic rearrangement of chromatin accessibility where the open chromatin region was no longer detected, indicating loss of the phased nucleosome up- and down- stream of the HBV enhancer/BCP. These data demonstrate that CTCF functions to regulate HBV chromatin conformation and nucleosomal positioning in episomal maintained cccDNA, which has important consequences for HBV transcription regulation.
Project description:Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) is a small DNA virus that replicates via an episomal covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) that serves as the transcriptional template for viral mRNAs. The host protein, CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF), is a key regulator of cellular transcription by maintaining epigenetic boundaries, nucleosome phasing, stabilisation of long-range chromatin loops and directing alternative exon splicing. We previously reported that CTCF binds two conserved motifs within Enhancer I of the HBV genome and represses viral transcripts, however, the underlying mechanisms were not identified. We show that CTCF depletion in cells harbouring cccDNA-like HBV molecules and in de novo infected cells resulted in an increase in spliced transcripts, which was most notable in the abundant SP1 spliced transcript. In contrast, depletion of CTCF in cell lines with integrated HBV DNA had no effect on the abundance of viral transcripts and in line with this observation there was limited evidence for CTCF binding to viral integrants, suggesting that CTCF-regulation of HBV transcription is specific to episomal cccDNA. Analysis of HBV chromatin topology by Assay for Transposase Accessibility/sequencing (ATAC-Seq) revealed an accessible region spanning Enhancers I and II and the basal core promoter (BCP). Mutating the CTCF binding sites within Enhancer I resulted in a dramatic rearrangement of chromatin accessibility where the open chromatin region was no longer detected, indicating loss of the phased nucleosome up- and down- stream of the HBV enhancer/BCP. These data demonstrate that CTCF functions to regulate HBV chromatin conformation and nucleosomal positioning in episomal maintained cccDNA, which has important consequences for HBV transcription regulation.
Project description:Background & Aims: IFN-alpha and -gamma have been reported to suppress cccDNA via APOBEC3 cytidine deaminase activity, and CDM-3008, an IFNAR2 agonist, also suppress cccDNA through interferon signaling. In order to develop a novel anti-HBV drug for functional or complete cure, we performed in silico screening using a structure of CDM-3008-binding pocket in IFNAR2. Approach & Results: The binding pocket of CDM-3008 in IFNAR2 was determined by LC-MS/MS using a CDM-3008-based molecular probe, CDM-3095 and a recombinant protein of IFNAR2 extracellular region. We conducted in silico screening of the binding compounds fitting the steric structure of the pocket. We identified 37 compounds and named them iCDM-1–37. We found that iCDM-34 showed anti-HCV and anti-HBV activities. We measured the anti-HBV activity of iCDM-34 with or without entecavir (ETV). iCDM-34 suppressed pregenome RNA, covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA), HBsAg, and HBeAg and clearly exhibited synergistic inhibitory effects with ETV. Metabolic stability of iCDM-34 was measured in human, mouse, and rat microsomal fractions. iCDM-34 was stable in human liver microsomal fraction. Furthermore, anti-HBV activity in human hepatocyte-chimeric mice revealed that iCDM-34 was not effective as a single agent, but when combined with ETV, it suppressed HBV DNA and cccDNA compared to ETV alone. Phosphoproteome analysis showed no activation of IFN signaling with iCDM-34 treatment. Transcriptome analysis of interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) revealed no increase in the expression, while downstream factors of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) showed increased expression. Conclusion: iCDM-34 is a novel anti-HBV drug that induces AhR activation and suppresses cccDNA. Conclusion: iCDM-34 is a novel anti-HBV drug that induces AhR activation and suppresses cccDNA.
Project description:Hepatitis B virus (HBV) persists by depositing a covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) in the nucleus that cannot be targeted by available antivirals. Cytokine treatments can purge cccDNA from the nucleus of infected cells by APOBEC3-mediated deamination. cccDNA levels in HBV-infected cells were not reduced by overexpression of APOBEC3A alone, but only after simultaneous addition of interferon. This indicated the need of an additional, interferon-induced factor (ISG). Microarray analysis identified ISG20 as the only nuclease located to the nucleus induced by type I and II interferons. ISG20 was confirmed to be expressed in acute, self-limiting but not in chronic hepatitis B in human livers. ISG20 knockdown abolished the interferon-induced loss of cccDNA, and co-expression of ISG20 and APOBEC3A was sufficient to diminish cccDNA without further treatment. To conclude, nucleolar ISG20 was identified as the nuclease contributing to interferon-induced purging of HBV cccDNA, opening new avenues for antiviral targeting.
Project description:In hepatocyte nuclei, hepatitis B virus (HBV) genomes occur episomally as covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA). The HBV X protein (HBx) is required to initiate and maintain HBV replication and acts as host gene trans-regulator. However, functionally relevant spatiotemporal localization and interactions of cccDNA and HBx remain to be understood. This is the first study utilizing circularized chromosome conformation capture (4C) to identify regional virus-host genome interactions. We combined 4C with RNA-seq and ChIP-seq to illuminate the nuclear landscape associated with HBV episomes and HBx. Moreover, we functionally studied HBx-binding to episomal HBV DNA. In human HBV-positive HepaRG hepatocytes, 4C and ChIP revealed specific nuclear localization of HBV episomes and HBx associated with actively transcribed nuclear domains correlating well in size with constrained topological units built up by chromatin fibre loops, which are believed to constitute fundamental cell nuclear architectural units. Interestingly, HBx alone occupied transcribed chromatin domains, and its binding to HBV episomes depended on its C-terminus in vitro. In conclusion, HBx and HBV DNA similarly follow higher-order nuclear assembly patterns, specifically favoring transcriptionally active nuclear compartments. These novel observations may shed light on important unsolved problems: to understand the long-term episomal stability and the facilitation of viral persistence.