Hepatitis C virus cell culture adaptive mutations enhance cell culture propagation by multiple mechanisms but boost antiviral responses in primary human hepatocytes.
Nicola FrericksRichard J P BrownBirthe M ReineckeMaike HerrmannYannick BrüggemannDaniel TodtCsaba MiskeyFlorian W R VondranEike SteinmannThomas PietschmannJulie SheldonPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
HCV infection remains a global health burden with 58 million people currently chronically infected. However, the detailed molecular mechanisms which underly persistence are incompletely defined. We utilized a long-term cell culture adapted HCV, exhibiting enhanced replicative fitness in different human liver cell lines, in order to identify molecular principles by which HCV optimizes its replication fitness. Our experimental data revealed that cell culture adaptive mutations confer changes in the host response and usage of various host factors. The latter allows functional flexibility at different stages of the viral replication cycle. However, increased replicative fitness resulted in an increased activation of the innate immune system, which likely poses boundary for functional variation in authentic hepatocytes, explaining the observed attenuation of the adapted virus population in primary hepatocytes.