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  • Long-term hepatitis B infection in a scalable hepatic co-culture system.

Long-term hepatitis B infection in a scalable hepatic co-culture system.

Nature communications (2017-07-27)
Benjamin Y Winer, Tiffany S Huang, Eitan Pludwinski, Brigitte Heller, Felix Wojcik, Gabriel E Lipkowitz, Amit Parekh, Cheul Cho, Anil Shrirao, Tom W Muir, Eric Novik, Alexander Ploss
ABSTRACT

Hepatitis B virus causes chronic infections in 250 million people worldwide. Chronic hepatitis B virus carriers are at risk of developing fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. A prophylactic vaccine exists and currently available antivirals can suppress but rarely cure chronic infections. The study of hepatitis B virus and development of curative antivirals are hampered by a scarcity of models that mimic infection in a physiologically relevant, cellular context. Here, we show that cell-culture and patient-derived hepatitis B virus can establish persistent infection for over 30 days in a self-assembling, primary hepatocyte co-culture system. Importantly, infection can be established without antiviral immune suppression, and susceptibility is not donor dependent. The platform is scalable to microwell formats, and we provide proof-of-concept for its use in testing entry inhibitors and antiviral compounds.The lack of models that mimic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in a physiologically relevant context has hampered drug development. Here, Winer et al. establish a self-assembling, primary hepatocyte co-culture system that can be infected with patient-derived HBV without further modifications.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Histidine Tagged Antibody, clone HIS.H8, clone HIS.H8, Upstate®, from mouse