More than 130 million people worldwide chronically infected with
hepatitis C virus (HCV) are at risk of developing severe liver disease.
Antiviral treatments are only partially effective against HCV infection,
and a vaccine is not available. Development of more efficient therapies
has been hampered by the lack of a small animal model. Building on the
observation that CD81 and occludin (OCLN) comprise the minimal set of
human factors required to render mouse cells permissive to HCV entry,
we previously showed that transient expression of these two human genes
is sufficient to allow viral uptake into fully immunocompetent inbred
mice.
Here we demonstrate that transgenic mice stably expressing human CD81
and OCLN also support HCV entry, but innate and adaptive immune
responses restrict HCV infection in vivo. Blunting antiviral
immunity in genetically humanized mice infected with HCV results in
measurable viraemia over several weeks. In mice lacking the essential
cellular co-factor cyclophilin A (CypA), HCV RNA replication is markedly
diminished, providing genetic evidence that this process is faithfully
recapitulated. Using a cell-based fluorescent reporter activated by the
NS3-4A protease we visualize HCV infection in single hepatocytes in vivo. Persistently infected mice produce de novo
infectious particles, which can be inhibited with directly acting
antiviral drug treatment, thereby providing evidence for the completion
of the entire HCV life cycle in inbred mice. This genetically humanized
mouse model opens new opportunities to dissect genetically HCV infection
in vivo and provides an important preclinical platform for
testing and prioritizing drug candidates and may also have utility for
evaluating vaccine efficacy.
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