Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) enters
the host cell through interactions with a cascade of cellular factors.
Although significant
progress has been made in understanding
HCV entry, the precise mechanisms by which HCV exploits the receptor
complex and host
machinery to enter the cell remain
unclear. This intricate process of viral entry likely depends on
additional yet-to-be-defined
cellular molecules. Recently, by applying
integrative functional genomics approaches, we identified and
interrogated distinct
sets of host dependencies in the complete
HCV life cycle. Viral entry assays using HCV pseudoparticles (HCVpps) of
various
genotypes uncovered multiple previously
unappreciated host factors, including E-cadherin, that mediate HCV
entry. E-cadherin
silencing significantly inhibited HCV
infection in Huh7.5.1 cells, HepG2/miR122/CD81 cells, and primary human
hepatocytes
at a postbinding entry step. Knockdown of
E-cadherin, however, had no effect on HCV RNA replication or internal
ribosomal
entry site (IRES)-mediated translation. In
addition, an E-cadherin monoclonal antibody effectively blocked HCV
entry and infection
in hepatocytes. Mechanistic studies
demonstrated that E-cadherin is closely associated with claudin-1
(CLDN1) and occludin
(OCLN) on the cell membrane. Depletion of
E-cadherin drastically diminished the cell-surface distribution of these
two tight
junction proteins in various hepatic cell
lines, indicating that E-cadherin plays an important regulatory role in
CLDN1/OCLN
localization on the cell surface.
Furthermore, loss of E-cadherin expression in hepatocytes is associated
with HCV-induced
epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition
(EMT), providing an important link between HCV infection and liver
cancer. Our data indicate
that a dynamic interplay among E-cadherin,
tight junctions, and EMT exists and mediates an important function in
HCV entry.
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