Literature detail

Capped RNA transcripts of full-length cDNA clones of swine hepatitis E virus are replication competent when transfected into Huh7 cells and infectious when intrahepatically inoculated into pigs.

Y W Huang1 G Haqshenas C Kasorndorkbua P G Halbur S U Emerson X J Meng
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Center for Molecular Medicine and Infectious Diseases, College of Veterinary Medicine, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1410 Price's Fork Rd., Blacksburg, VA 24061-0342, USA.
PMID 15650181 2005 J Virol eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Swine hepatitis E virus (swine HEV), the first animal strain of HEV to be isolated, is a zoonotic agent. We report here the construction and in vitro and in vivo characterizations of infectious cDNA clones of swine HEV. Eight overlapping fragments spanning the entire genome were amplified by reverse transcription-PCR and assembled into a full-length cDNA clone, clone C, which contained 14 mutations compared to the consensus sequence of swine HEV. RNA transcripts from clone C were not infectious, as determined by intrahepatic inoculation into pigs and by in vitro transfection of Huh7 cells. Multiple site-based site-directed mutagenesis was performed to generate three new cDNA clones (pSHEV-1, pSHEV-2, and pSHEV-3) which differed from each other. The transfection of capped RNA transcripts into human liver Huh7 cells resulted in the synthesis of both ORF2 capsid and ORF3 proteins, indicating that the cDNA clones were replication competent. Each of the three clones resulted in active swine HEV infections after the intrahepatic inoculation of pigs with capped RNA transcripts. The patterns of seroconversion, viremia, and fecal virus shedding for pigs inoculated with RNA transcripts from clones pSHEV-2 and pSHEV-3 were similar to each other and to those for pigs inoculated with wild-type swine HEV, suggesting that the nucleotide differences between these two cDNA clones were not critical for replication. Pigs inoculated with RNA transcripts from clone pSHEV-1, which contained three nonsilent mutations in the ORF2 capsid gene, had a delayed appearance of seroconversion and fecal virus shedding and had undetectable viremia. The availability of these infectious cDNA clones affords us an opportunity to understand the mechanisms of cross-species infection by constructing chimeric human and swine HEVs.

Virus Replication Animals Cell Line, Tumor Cloning, Molecular DNA, Complementary Hepatitis E Hepatitis E virus Hepatitis, Viral, Animal Humans Liver Molecular Sequence Data RNA Caps RNA, Viral Sequence Analysis, DNA Swine Swine Diseases Transcription, Genetic Transfection

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

4 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Swine hepatitis E virus RNA transcripts replicated in human liver Huh7 cells, demonstrating viral replication competence in human-derived cells.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The transfection of capped RNA transcripts into human liver Huh7 cells resulted in the synthesis of both ORF2 capsid and ORF3 proteins, indicating that the cDNA clones were replication competent.

Method
transfection; replication assay
Sample type
liver cells
Experimental system
in vitro cell culture
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Capped RNA transcripts of swine hepatitis E virus cDNA clones caused infection and viral replication in pigs following intrahepatic inoculation.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Each of the three clones resulted in active swine HEV infections after the intrahepatic inoculation of pigs with capped RNA transcripts. The patterns of seroconversion, viremia, and fecal virus shedding for pigs inoculated with RNA transcripts from clones pSHEV-2 and pSHEV-3 were similar to each other and to those for pigs inoculated with wild-type swine HEV.

Method
intrahepatic inoculation; experimental infection
Sample type
serum; feces
Experimental system
in vivo animal experiment
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Three nonsilent mutations in the swine hepatitis E virus ORF2 capsid gene altered replication and infection kinetics in pigs.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Pigs inoculated with RNA transcripts from clone pSHEV-1, which contained three nonsilent mutations in the ORF2 capsid gene, had a delayed appearance of seroconversion and fecal virus shedding and had undetectable viremia.

Genes or proteins
ORF2 capsid
Mutations
three nonsilent mutations
Mechanism types
pathogenicity; replication_efficiency
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

Seroconversion was detected in pigs following inoculation with capped RNA transcripts of cloned swine hepatitis E virus, indicating successful infection.

Virus
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The patterns of seroconversion, viremia, and fecal virus shedding for pigs inoculated with RNA transcripts from clones pSHEV-2 and pSHEV-3 were similar to each other and to those for pigs inoculated with wild-type swine HEV.

Sample type
serum