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Glucocorticosteroids Increase Cell Entry by Hepatitis C Virus

  作者 Ciesek, S; Steinmann, E; Iken, M; Ott, M; Helfritz, FA; Wappler, I; Manns, MP; Wedemeyer, H; Pietschmann, T  
  选自 期刊  Gastroenterology;  卷期  2010年138-5;  页码  1875-1884  
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[摘要]BACKGROUND & AIMS: Corticosteroids are used as immunosuppressants in patients with autoimmune disorders and transplant recipients. However, these drugs worsen hepatitis C virus (HCV) recurrence after liver transplantation, suggesting that they may directly exacerbate HCV infection. METHODS: The influence of immunosuppressive drugs on HCV replication, assembly, and entry was assessed in Huh-7.5 cells and primary human hepatocytes using cell culture- and patient-derived HCV. Replication was quantified by immunofluorescence, luciferase assays, quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, or core enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. Expression of HCV entry factors was evaluated by cell sorting and immunoblot analyses. RESULTS: Glucocorticosteroids slightly reduced HCV RNA replication but increased efficiency of HCV entry by up to 10-fold. This was independent of HCV genotype but specific to HCV because vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein-dependent infection was not affected by these drugs. The increase in HCV entry was accompanied by up-regulation of messenger RNA and protein levels of occludin and the scavenger receptor class B type I-2 host cell proteins required for HCV infection; increase of entry by glucocorticosteroids was ablated by RU-486, an inhibitor of glucocorticosteroid signaling. Glucocorticosteroids increased propagation of cell culture-derived HCV similar to 5- to 10-fold in partially differentiated human hepatoma cells and increased infection of primary human hepatocytes by cell culture- and patient-derived HCV. CONCLUSIONS: Glucocorticosteroides specifically increase HCV entry by up-regulating the cell entry factors ocdudin and scavenger receptor class B type I. Our data suggest that the potential effects of high-dose glucocordcosteroids on HCV infection in vivo may be due to increased HCV dissemination.

 
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