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Single hepatocytes show persistence and transcriptional inactivity of hepatitis B
Ashwin Balagopal, Tanner Grudda, Ruy M. Ribeiro, Yasmeen S. Saad, Hyon S. Hwang, Jeffrey Quinn, Michael Murphy, Kathleen Ward, Richard K. Sterling, Yang Zhang, Alan S. Perelson, Mark S. Sulkowski, William O. Osburn, Chloe L. Thio
Ashwin Balagopal, Tanner Grudda, Ruy M. Ribeiro, Yasmeen S. Saad, Hyon S. Hwang, Jeffrey Quinn, Michael Murphy, Kathleen Ward, Richard K. Sterling, Yang Zhang, Alan S. Perelson, Mark S. Sulkowski, William O. Osburn, Chloe L. Thio
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Research Article Hepatology Infectious disease

Single hepatocytes show persistence and transcriptional inactivity of hepatitis B

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Abstract

There is no cure for the more than 270 million people chronically infected with HBV. Nucleos(t)ide analogs (NUCs), the mainstay of anti-HBV treatment, block HBV reverse transcription. NUCs do not eliminate the intranuclear covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA), from which viral RNAs, including pregenomic RNA (pgRNA), are transcribed. A key gap in designing a cure is understanding how NUCs affect HBV replication and transcription because serum markers yield an incomplete view of intrahepatic HBV. We applied single-cell laser capture microdissection and droplet digital PCR to paired liver biopsies collected from 5 HBV/HIV-coinfected persons who took NUCs over 2–4 years. From biopsy 1 to 2, proportions of HBV-infected hepatocytes declined with adherence to NUC treatment (P < 0.05); we extrapolated that eradication of HBV will take over 10 decades with NUCs in these participants. In individual hepatocytes, pgRNA levels diminished 28- to 73-fold during NUC treatment, corresponding with decreased tissue HBV core antigen staining (P < 0.01). In 4 out of 5 participants, hepatocytes with cccDNA but undetectable pgRNA (transcriptionally inactive) were present, and these were enriched in 3 participants during NUC treatment. Further work to unravel mechanisms of cccDNA transcriptional inactivation may lead to therapies that can achieve this in all hepatocytes, resulting in a functional cure.

Authors

Ashwin Balagopal, Tanner Grudda, Ruy M. Ribeiro, Yasmeen S. Saad, Hyon S. Hwang, Jeffrey Quinn, Michael Murphy, Kathleen Ward, Richard K. Sterling, Yang Zhang, Alan S. Perelson, Mark S. Sulkowski, William O. Osburn, Chloe L. Thio

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Figure 3

The transcriptional index is reduced when plasma HBV DNA levels decrease.

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The transcriptional index is reduced when plasma HBV DNA levels decrease...
The transcriptional index was calculated for each cell by dividing the number of pgRNA copies by the number of cccDNA copies in the same cell (x axis). Violin plots (showing medians, IQRs, distributions, and individual points) show the transcriptional index for every cell, stratified by participant, in the first (salmon) and second (light blue) biopsies. Shown above each pair of violin plots are the contemporaneous plasma HBV DNA levels (above) and the number of examined hepatocytes (below). Values are log10 transformed; therefore, hepatocytes that did not contain pgRNA or cccDNA are not shown.

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