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A key issue for antiviral therapy is the development of strategies that can either alone or in combination with nucleoside analogues lead to the reduction and eventual eradication of cccDNA from infected hepatocytes. Information about the stability of cccDNA has been forthcoming from studies with cell culture models for viral infection and replication as well as from the analysis of viral DNA extracted from liver biopsies of animals recovering from transient infections. Whereas in nondividing primary hepatocyte cultures cccDNA is stable,12,13 in dividing tissue culture cells, cccDNA is passed on to daughter cells suggesting that it can “survive” mitosis.14,15 Results from experimentally infected chimpanzees and woodchucks indicated that during resolution of acute infections loss of cccDNA occurs primarily by killing of infected heaptocytes by cytotoxic T cells and possibly by noncytolytic mechanisms induced by cytokines and other unknown factors that are part of the immune-mediated clearance phase.16,17,18,19,20 The exact level of contribution of each event to the decline of cccDNA levels observed during the resolution of an infection is still not resolved. A major gap in knowledge concerns the nature of the host factors that play a role, if any, during noncytolytic clearance of cccDNA. A recent report claimed that interferon alpha (IFN-α and lymphotoxin beta (LT-β) pathways might cause the destruction of cccDNA by certain endonucleases following deamination of the minus strand DNA by APOBEC3A (A3A) and A3B.21 However, whether these results bear any relevance for clearance of HBV infections during acute infections remains to be determined.22
Efforts to develop strategies that could induce cccDNA loss during CHB have been hampered by the lack of tissue culture systems that are permissive for HBV infection and at the same time are amenable to experimental manipulations, such as gene knockout technologies. However, identification of the HBV receptor, sodium taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide (NTCP), opened the possibility for establishment of HepG2 cell lines permissive for infections with HBV produced in tissue culture cells.23,24 In this report, we demonstrate the utility of this system for investigations on cccDNA formation and stability by combining it with the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/Cas9 platform for efficient gene knockout.25,26,27 Using this system, we investigated whether cccDNA formed from infectious virus can be targeted by a recombinant endonuclease and whether cellular enzymes can either repair or destroy cccDNA under selected conditions. |
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