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Arsenic trioxide impacts hepatitis B virus core nuclear localization and efficiently interferes with HBV infection.

Samuel HofmannJulius LutherVerena PlankAndreas OswaldJulia MaiIlka SimonsJulija MillerValeria FalconeLea Hansen-PalmusHartmut HengelMichael NassalUlrike ProtzerSabrina Schreiner
Published in: Microbiology spectrum (2024)
The main challenge for the achievement of a functional cure for hepatitis B virus (HBV) is the covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA), the highly stable persistence reservoir of HBV, which is maintained by further rounds of infection with newly generated progeny viruses or by intracellular recycling of mature nucleocapsids. Eradication of the cccDNA is considered to be the holy grail for HBV curative treatment; however, current therapeutic approaches fail to directly tackle this HBV persistence reservoir. The molecular effect of arsenic trioxide (ATO) on HBV infection, protein expression, and cccDNA formation and maintenance, however, has not been characterized and understood until now. In this study, we reveal ATO treatment as a novel and innovative therapeutic approach against HBV infections, repressing viral gene expression and replication as well as the stable cccDNA pool at low micromolar concentrations by affecting the cellular function of promyelocytic leukemia nuclear bodies.
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