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Persistent infection with a rabbit hepatitis E virus created by a reverse genetics system.

Wenjing ZhangYasushi AmiYuriko SuzakiYen Hai DoanSuljid JirintaiMasaharu TakahashiHiroaki OkamotoNaokazu TakedaMasamichi MuramatsuTian-Cheng Li
Published in: Transboundary and emerging diseases (2020)
Rabbit hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a novel zoonotic infectious agent. Although a cell culture system to grow the virus has been established, there is currently no reverse genetics system for generating the virus. In this study, capped genomic rabbit HEV RNAs generated by in vitro transcription were transfected into PLC/PRF/5 cells, and the recovered viruses were subsequently passaged in the cells. The cell culture supernatant was capable of infecting rabbits negative for anti-HEV antibody by intravenous and oral inoculation, indicating that rabbit HEV generated by the reverse genetics system is infectious. Genome-wide analyses indicated that no nucleotide sequence change occurred in the virus genomes that were recovered from the cell culture supernatant after transfection and passaged one time or in the virus genomes recovered from faecal specimens of the infected rabbits. Ribavirin, a broad-spectrum anti-viral inhibitor, efficiently abrogated virus replication ex vivo and transiently suppressed the virus growth in the virus-infected rabbits, suggesting that this reagent is a candidate for therapeutic treatment. In addition, transmission of rabbit HEV to rabbits caused persistent infection, suggesting that the virus-infected rabbit could be an animal model for virus-induced hepatitis. The infectious rabbit HEV produced by a reverse genetics system would be useful to elucidate the mechanisms of HEV replication and the pathogenesis of viral hepatitis.
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