Hepatitis C Virus Stimulates Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor Expression To Facilitate Viral Propagation
92
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that HCV regulates LDLR expression at transcriptional and posttranslational level via SREBPs and PCSK9 to promote lipid uptake and facilitate viral proliferation.
read more
Abstract: Lipids play a crucial role in multiple aspects of hepatitis C virus (HCV) life cycle. HCV modulates host lipid metabolism to enrich the intracellular milieu with lipids to facilitate its proliferation. However, very little is known about the influence of HCV on lipid uptake from bloodstream. Low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) is involved in uptake of cholesterol rich low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particles from the bloodstream. The association of HCV particles with lipoproteins implicates their role in HCV entry; however, the precise role of LDLR in HCV entry still remains controversial. Here, we investigate the effect of HCV infection on LDLR expression and the underlying mechanism(s) involved. We demonstrate that HCV stimulates LDLR expression in both HCV-infected Huh7 cells and in liver tissue from chronic hepatitis C patients. Fluorescence activated cell sorting and immunofluorescence analysis revealed enhanced cell surface and total expression of LDLR in HCV-infected cells. Increased LDLR expression resulted in the enhanced uptake of lipoprotein particles by HCV-infected cells. Analysis of LDLR gene promoter identified a pivotal role of sterol-regulatory element binding proteins (SREBPs), in the HCV-mediated stimulation of LDLR transcription. In addition, HCV negatively modulated the expression of proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9), a protein that facilitates LDLR degradation. Ectopic expression of wild-type PCSK9 or gain-of-function PCSK9 mutant negatively affected HCV replication. Overall, our results demonstrate that HCV regulates LDLR expression at transcriptional and posttranslational level via SREBPs and PCSK9 to promote lipid uptake and facilitate viral proliferation.
IMPORTANCE HCV modulates host lipid metabolism to promote enrichment of lipids in intracellular environment, which are essential in multiple aspects of HCV life cycle. However, very little is known about the influence of HCV on lipid uptake from the bloodstream. LDLR is involved in uptake of cholesterol rich lipid particles from bloodstream. In this study, we investigated the effect of HCV on LDLR expression and the underlying mechanism triggered by the virus to modulate LDLR expression. Our observations suggest that HCV upregulates LDLR expression at both the protein and the transcript levels and that this upregulation likely contributes toward the uptake of serum lipids by infected hepatocytes. Abrogation of HCV-mediated upregulation of LDLR inhibits serum lipid uptake and thereby perturbs HCV replication. Overall, our findings highlight the importance of serum lipid uptake by infected hepatocytes in HCV life cycle.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Cellular microRNA networks regulate host dependency of hepatitis C virus infection.
Qisheng Li,Brianna Lowey,Catherine Sodroski,Siddharth R. Krishnamurthy,Hawwa Alao,Helen Cha,Stephan Chiu,Ramy El-Diwany,Marc G. Ghany,T. Jake Liang +9 more
TL;DR: This comprehensive HCV–miRNA interaction map provides fundamental insights into HCV-mediated pathogenesis and unveils molecular pathways linking RNA biology to viral infections.
Characterization of Hepatitis C Virus Interaction with Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycans
Yan Xu,Pierre Martinez,Karin Séron,Guangxiang Luo,Fabrice Allain,Jean Dubuisson,Sandrine Belouzard +6 more
TL;DR: It is shown that apolipoprotein E is likely responsible for virus binding to heparan sulfate and that N- and 6-O-sulfation of the heparin sulfate proteoglycans is required for HCV infection and that the minimum HS oligosaccharide length required forHCV infection is a decasaccharides.
71
PCSK9: Regulation and Target for Drug Development for Dyslipidemia
TL;DR: The swift evolution of PCSK9 from novel gene to drug target, to animal and human testing, to outcome trials and clinical applications is reviewed, and how the genetics-guided path toPCSK9 inhibitor development exemplifies a new paradigm in pharmacology is explored.
69
Hypercholesterolemia: The role of PCSK9.
TL;DR: The functions and regulatory mechanisms of PCSK9, a proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin-9 that appears to modulate glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, abdominal obesity, inflammation, and hypertension, are reviewed.
65
The Multifaceted Roles of Autophagy in Flavivirus-Host Interactions
TL;DR: The current knowledge on the role of autophagy in the flavivirus life cycle is summarized and the impacts of virus-induced Autophagy on the pathogeneses of flaviv virus-associated diseases and the potential use ofautophagy as a therapeutic target for curing flaviviral infections and related human diseases are discussed.
References
Identification of a novel sterol-independent regulatory element in the human low density lipoprotein receptor promoter.
TL;DR: This study identifies, for the first time, acis-acting regulatory element in the LDLR promoter that is responsible for sterol-independent regulation of LDLR transcription.
55
Effects of hypolipidemic agent nordihydroguaiaretic acid on lipid droplets and hepatitis C virus.
TL;DR: NDGA‐mediated alterations of host lipid metabolism, LD morphology, and VLDL transport appear to negatively influence HCV proliferation.
54
New Lipid-Lowering Agents Acting on LDL Receptors
Hubert Scharnagl,Winfried März +1 more
TL;DR: It is interesting that drugs inducing the LDL-R usually also lower TG and, in the case of HMGRI, increase HDL-C, and it is important to emphasise the importance of modifying lipid metabolism beyond lowering LDL-C by lowering TG and raising HDL- C.
40
Identification of Heterogeneous Nuclear Ribonucleoprotein K as a Transactivator for Human Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor Gene Transcription
Hai Li,Jingwen Liu +1 more
TL;DR: It is reported, for the first time, that hnRNP K is specifically involved in human LDL receptor (LDLR) gene transcription in HepG2 cells and depletion by siRNA transfection reduces the expression of LDLR mRNA and protein by more than 50% as measured by quantitative real-time PCR and Western blot analysis.
23
Insulin resistance and sustained virological response in hepatitis C: from bench to bedside.
TL;DR: An association between insulin resistance and the likelihood of curing hepatitis C is demonstrated and reports indicating a higher SVR rate in patients with normal insulin sensitivity while demonstrating, in multivariate analysis, that insulin resistance was an independent variable.
19
Related Papers (5)
Marianne Abifadel,Mathilde Varret,Jean-Pierre Rabès,Delphine Allard,Khadija Ouguerram,Martine Devillers,Corinne Cruaud,Suzanne Benjannet,Louise Wickham,D. Erlich,Aurélie Derré,Ludovic Villéger,Michel Farnier,Isabel Beucler,Eric Bruckert,Jean Chambaz,Bernard Chanu,Jean-Michel Lecerf,Gérald Luc,Philippe Moulin,Jean Weissenbach,Annick Prat,Michel Krempf,Claudine Junien,Nabil G. Seidah,Catherine Boileau +25 more
Joachim Lupberger,Mirjam B. Zeisel,Mirjam B. Zeisel,Fei Xiao,Fei Xiao,Christine Thumann,Christine Thumann,Isabel Fofana,Isabel Fofana,Laetitia Zona,Laetitia Zona,Christopher Davis,Christopher J. Mee,Marine Turek,Marine Turek,Sebastian Gorke,Cathy Royer,Cathy Royer,Benoit Fischer,Muhammad N. Zahid,Muhammad N. Zahid,Dimitri Lavillette,Judith Fresquet,François-Loïc Cosset,S. Michael Rothenberg,Thomas Pietschmann,Arvind H. Patel,Patrick Pessaux,Michel Doffoel,Wolfgang Raffelsberger,Olivier Poch,Jane A. McKeating,Laurent Brino,Thomas F. Baumert,Thomas F. Baumert +34 more