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The degree of variability in the amino terminal region of the E2/NS1 protein of hepatitis C virus correlates with responsiveness to interferon therapy in viremic patients
Author(s) -
Okada ShunIchi,
Akahane Yoshihirc,
Suzuki Hiroshi,
Okamoto Hiroaki,
Mishiro Shunji
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.1840160302
Subject(s) - virology , interferon , hepatitis c virus , medicine , antiviral therapy , immunology , virus , biology , chronic hepatitis
We investigated amino acid heterogeneity in the variable regions of the E2/NS1 viral protein in interferon‐responsive and interferon‐nonresponsive patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection. The study assessed whether any particular heterogeneity pattern(s) could be useful in predicting responsiveness to interferon treatment. The nucleic acid sequences of the hepatitis C virus genome were analyzed from six patients with chronic hepatitis treated with an interferon‐β, three of whom did not respond to the therapy and another three who showed remarkable improvement in the serum levels of liver enzymes and hepatitis C virus RNA after 6 mo. The complementary DNA clones propagated from each of the nonresponders showed significant diversity of both nucleotide and amino acid sequence, especially at the hypervariable region 1 within the putative E2/NS1 gene of the virus, suggesting that these patients were infected with a large heterogeneous pool of hepatitis C virus variants. In contrast, the responders showed little or no diversity in the sequence of the complementary DNA clones, suggesting that they were infected with one or a small population of viral genotypes containing significantly less variability in the E2/NS1 hypervariable region 1. These results suggested that a large variable population of hepatitis C virus genotypes is implicated in patients who are nonresponders to interferon treatment. In addition, a significant change in the hepatitis C virus genotype population was observed in nonresponders after interferon treatment. This may reflect a differential viral sensitivity to interferon, selective immune pressure by the host or both. (H EPATOLOGY 1992;16:619–624.)

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