Low cross-neutralization of hepatitis C correlates with liver disease in immunocompromized patients.

AIDS

aUniversité de Lyon, UCB-Lyon1, IFR128, Lyon, F-69007; INSERM, U758, Lyon, F-69007; Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, Lyon, F-69007 bEA 4271 University Nantes cUnité INSERM 955 Créteil dUnité INSERM 785 Villejuif, France. *Dimitri Lavillette and Cyrille Féray contributed equally to the writing of the article.

Published: June 2015

Background And Aims: Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection causes severe liver disease in HIV-infected patients and liver transplant recipients. The impact of serum and immunoglobulin on viral entry was analysed in these patients.

Method: Sera from 60 anti-HCV positive patients, including 30 who were also anti-HIV positive, were tested with HCVpp from different genotypes (1a, 1b, 3 and 4) and with HCVcc (H77/JFH1). Seventeen HIV-seropositive and 13 HIV-seronegative patients with decompensated liver disease were studied before and after liver transplant.

Results: Serum neutralization was markedly lower after liver transplant and in HIV patients than in mono-infected immune-competent individuals. This effect was due to low antibody-mediated neutralization. In HIV patients, low neutralization was correlated with low lymphocyte T CD4 cell counts and the severity of liver disease. To characterize neutralization, we tested HCVpp lacking hypervariable region (HVR1) and SR-BI receptor cholesterol transfer inhibition by BLT-4. These experiments showed that neutralization was strongly dependent on the HVR1 and the SR-BI receptor. HVR1 sequences showed that selective pressures were low in immune-compromised patients and highly correlated to HCV neutralization after liver transplant. Neutralization experiments were reproduced with HCV strain JFH1.

Conclusion: Serum neutralization in HIV-coinfected patients and HCV-infected liver transplant recipients is poor enhancing HCV entry through HVR1/SR-BI interplay. This may contribute to the severity of hepatitis C in these settings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000000651DOI Listing

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