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  • Title: Persistent replication of hepatitis C virus replicons expressing the beta-lactamase reporter in subpopulations of highly permissive Huh7 cells.
    Author: Murray EM, Grobler JA, Markel EJ, Pagnoni MF, Paonessa G, Simon AJ, Flores OA.
    Journal: J Virol; 2003 Mar; 77(5):2928-35. PubMed ID: 12584317.
    Abstract:
    Progress toward development of better therapies for the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection has been hampered by poor understanding of HCV biology and the lack of biological assays suitable for drug screening. Here we describe a powerful HCV replication system that employs HCV replicons expressing the beta-lactamase reporter (bla replicons) and subpopulations of Huh7 cells that are more permissive (or "enhanced") to HCV replication than naïve Huh7 cells. Enhanced cells represent a small fraction of permissive cells present among naïve Huh7 cells that is enriched during selection with replicons expressing the neomycin phosphotransferase gene (neo replicons). The level of permissiveness of cell lines harboring neo replicons can vary greatly, and the enhanced phenotype is usually revealed upon removal of the neo replicon with inhibitors of HCV replication. Replicon removal is responsible for increased permissiveness, since this effect could be reproduced either with alpha interferon or with an HCV NS5B inhibitor. Moreover, adaptive mutations present in the replicon genome used during selection do not influence the permissiveness of the resulting enhanced-cell population, suggesting that the mechanisms governing the permissiveness of enhanced cells are independent from viral adaptation. Because the beta-lactamase reporter allows simultaneous quantitation of replicon-harboring cells and reporter activity, it was possible to investigate the relationship between genome replication activity and the frequency with which transfected genomes can establish persistent replication. Our study demonstrates that differences in the replication potential of the viral genome are manifested primarily in the frequency with which persistent replication is established but modestly affect the number of replicons observed per replicon-harboring cell. Replicon copy number was found to vary over a narrow range that may be defined by a minimal number required for persistent maintenance and a maximum that is limited by the availability of essential host factors.
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