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Integrated hepatitis B virus DNA maintains surface antigen production during antiviral treatment
Tanner Grudda, Hyon S. Hwang, Maraake Taddese, Jeffrey Quinn, Mark S. Sulkowski, Richard K. Sterling, Ashwin Balagopal, Chloe L. Thio
Tanner Grudda, Hyon S. Hwang, Maraake Taddese, Jeffrey Quinn, Mark S. Sulkowski, Richard K. Sterling, Ashwin Balagopal, Chloe L. Thio
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Research Article Infectious disease Virology

Integrated hepatitis B virus DNA maintains surface antigen production during antiviral treatment

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Abstract

The focus of hepatitis B functional cure, defined as sustained loss of hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface antigen (HBsAg) and HBV DNA from blood, is on eliminating or silencing the intranuclear template for HBV replication, covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA). However, HBsAg also derives from HBV DNA integrated into the host genome (iDNA). Little is known about the contribution of iDNA to circulating HBsAg with current therapeutics. We applied a multiplex droplet digital PCR assay to demonstrate that iDNA is responsible for maintaining HBsAg quantities in some individuals. Using paired bulk liver tissue from 16 HIV/HBV-coinfected persons on nucleos(t)ide analog (NUC) therapy, we demonstrate that people with larger HBsAg declines between biopsies derive HBsAg from cccDNA, whereas people with stable HBsAg levels derive predominantly from iDNA. We applied our assay to individual hepatocytes in paired tissues from 3 people and demonstrated that the individual with significant HBsAg decline had a commensurate loss of infected cells with transcriptionally active cccDNA, while individuals without HBsAg decline had stable or increasing numbers of cells producing HBsAg from iDNA. We demonstrate that while NUC therapy may be effective at controlling cccDNA replication and transcription, innovative treatments are required to address iDNA transcription that sustains HBsAg production.

Authors

Tanner Grudda, Hyon S. Hwang, Maraake Taddese, Jeffrey Quinn, Mark S. Sulkowski, Richard K. Sterling, Ashwin Balagopal, Chloe L. Thio

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Figure 1

HBV transcriptional map and multiplex ddPCR assay targets.

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HBV transcriptional map and multiplex ddPCR assay targets.
Horizontal li...
Horizontal lines depict HBV transcripts derived from cccDNA or iDNA (labeled). The variable chimeric virus-host region is shown as hashed lines at the 3′ end of iDNA-derived transcripts. The dashed vertical line is the EcoRI cut site for orientation. Solid vertical lines show the locations of the DR1, DR2, and poly-A signal (PAS) regions for reference. Individual targeted assays for each component of the multiplex ddPCR are shown as vertical boxes spanning the shaded regions at the 5′, middle, and 3′ ends of HBV transcripts.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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