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Cross talk between hepatitis B virus and innate immunity of hepatocytes.

Forough Golsaz-ShiraziFazel Shokri
Published in: Reviews in medical virology (2021)
Innate immunity plays a major role in controlling viral infections. Recent exploration of sodium taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide receptor as specific hepatitis B virus (HBV) receptor in human hepatocytes has provided appropriate cell culture tools to study the innate immunity of hepatocytes and its cross talk with HBV. In this review, we give a brief update on interaction between HBV and innate immunity using the currently available in vitro cellular models that support the complete life cycle of HBV. We will discuss how HBV can act as a 'stealth' virus to counteract the innate immune responses mediated by the pathogen recognition receptors of hepatocytes and escape the first line of surveillance of the host immune system. We give an overview of the cellular components of innate immunity that present in these in vitro models and discuss how activating these innate immunity components may contribute to the eradication of HBV infection.
Keyphrases
  • hepatitis b virus
  • immune response
  • liver failure
  • endothelial cells
  • life cycle
  • public health
  • sars cov
  • signaling pathway
  • toll like receptor
  • inflammatory response
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • drug induced
  • disease virus