Enhancement of hepatitis B virus infection by noninfectious subviral particles

非感染性亚病毒颗粒增强乙型肝炎病毒感染

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Abstract

The biological function of the huge excess of subviral particles over virions in hepatitis B virus infections is unknown. Using the duck hepatitis B virus as a model, we unexpectedly found that subviral particles strongly enhance intracellular viral replication and gene expression. This effect is dependent on the multiplicity of infection, the ratio of virions over subviral particles, and the time point of addition of subviral particles. Most importantly, we show that the pre-S protein of the subviral particles triggers enhancement and requires the presence of the binding regions for putative cell-encoded virus receptor proteins. These data suggest that enhancement is due either to the recently described transactivation function of the pre-S protein or to signalling pathways which become activated upon binding of subviral particles to cellular receptors. The findings are of clinical importance, since they imply that infectivity of sera containing hepadnaviruses depends not only on the amount of infectious virions but also decisively on the number of particles devoid of nucleic acids. A similarly dramatic enhancing effect of noninfectious particles in other virus infections is well conceivable.

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