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1.
J Viral Hepat ; 14(1): 55-63, 2007 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17212645

ABSTRACT

Attempts to investigate changes in various forms of intrahepatic hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA during antiviral therapy have been hampered by limitations in technologies and scarcity of adequate tissue for analysis. We used a sensitive, specific assay to detect and quantitate covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) from total intrahepatic HBV DNA in clinical liver specimens. Total HBV DNA and cccDNA from 21 needle-biopsy specimens were quantified, with levels ranging from 0.1 to 9.8 copies/cell and 0.3 to 491.0 copies/cell, respectively. Then, we performed the same determinations on baseline and week-52 liver needle-biopsy specimens from eight patients enrolled in a clinical trial and evaluated the association between intrahepatic HBV DNA levels and serological and virological endpoints. In most patients, levels of intrahepatic HBV DNA, including cccDNA, decreased over the 52-week study, regardless of therapy or serological outcome. Higher ratios of cccDNA to total HBV DNA were detected at week 52 than at baseline indicating a shift in predominance of nonreplicating virus in posttreatment specimens. In patients who achieved treatment-related or spontaneous hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) responses, including those harbouring tyrosine-methionine-aspartate-aspartate-mutant HBV, levels of intrahepatic and serum HBV DNA suppression were greater than those in patients without HBeAg responses. In conclusion, this pilot study of intrahepatic HBV replicative forms in patients with chronic hepatitis B indicated that total intrahepatic and, specifically, cccDNA levels are not static but change as a reflection of serological and virological events.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , DNA, Circular/analysis , Hepatitis B virus/genetics , Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy , Hepatitis B, Chronic/virology , Interferon-alpha/therapeutic use , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Alanine Transaminase/blood , Amino Acid Motifs , Biopsy, Fine-Needle , DNA Probes/genetics , DNA, Circular/genetics , DNA, Viral/genetics , Drug Therapy, Combination , Hepatitis B e Antigens/blood , Hepatitis B, Chronic/blood , Hepatitis B, Chronic/pathology , Humans , Mutation , Pilot Projects , Virus Replication/drug effects
2.
Hepatology ; 33(6): 1527-32, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11391543

ABSTRACT

A study in Chinese patients with chronic hepatitis B showed that treatment with lamivudine for 1 year significantly improves liver histology and enhances hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) seroconversion compared with placebo. Fifty-eight patients from this 1-year study have received long-term treatment with lamivudine 100 mg; the outcome of 3 years of lamivudine is reported here. Before treatment, all patients had detectable HBeAg. HBeAg seroconversion (HBeAg-negative, anti-HBe-positive), hepatitis B virus (HBV)-DNA suppression, alanine transaminase (ALT) normalization, emergence of YMDD variant HBV, liver histology, and long-term safety were assessed. After 3 years of continuous treatment with lamivudine 100 mg daily, 40% (23 of 58) of patients achieved HBeAg seroconversion. In patients with baseline serum ALT >2 x upper limit of normal (ULN), the rate of HBeAg seroconversion was 65% (17 of 26). Median serum HBV-DNA concentrations were below the level of detection, and median ALT concentrations were within the normal range throughout 3 years of treatment. YMDD variant HBV emerged in 33 of 58 (57%) patients during the 3 years, of whom 9 (27%) achieved HBeAg seroconversion (6 after emergence of YMDD variant HBV). ALT levels and histologic scores after emergence of YMDD variant HBV did not show major deterioration. Lamivudine was well tolerated during 3 years of therapy. In conclusion, these data in Chinese patients with chronic hepatitis B show enhanced seroconversion rates with extended lamivudine treatment. Up to two thirds of patients with moderately elevated pretreatment ALT achieved HBeAg seroconversion after 3 years of therapy.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/administration & dosage , Hepatitis B e Antigens/analysis , Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy , Hepatitis B, Chronic/immunology , Lamivudine/administration & dosage , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Alanine Transaminase/blood , Antiviral Agents/adverse effects , Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , DNA, Viral/blood , Delayed-Action Preparations , Female , Genetic Variation/physiology , Hepatitis B virus/genetics , Hepatitis B, Chronic/pathology , Hepatitis B, Chronic/virology , Humans , Lamivudine/adverse effects , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Liver/pathology , Male , Middle Aged , Safety , Time Factors
3.
J Virol ; 74(24): 11754-63, 2000 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11090175

ABSTRACT

Treatment of hepatitis B virus carriers with the nucleoside analog lamivudine suppresses virus replication. However, rather than completely eliminating the virus, long-term treatment often ends in the outgrowth of drug-resistant variants. Using woodchucks chronically infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV), we investigated the consequences of combining lamivudine treatment with immunotherapy mediated by an adenovirus superinfection. Eight infected woodchucks were treated with lamivudine and four were infected with approximately 10(13) particles of an adenovirus type 5 vector expressing beta-galactosidase. Serum samples and liver biopsies collected following the combination therapy revealed a 10- to 20-fold reduction in DNA replication intermediates in three of four woodchucks at 2 weeks after adenovirus infection. At the same time, covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) and viral mRNA levels both declined about two- to threefold in those woodchucks, while mRNA levels for gamma interferon and tumor necrosis factor alpha as well as for the T-cell markers CD4 and CD8 were elevated about twofold. Recovery from adenovirus infection was marked by elevation of sorbitol dehydrogenase, a marker for hepatocyte necrosis, as well as an 8- to 10-fold increase in expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen, a marker for DNA synthesis, indicating significant hepatocyte turnover. The fact that replicative DNA levels declined more than cccDNA and mRNA levels following adenovirus infection suggests that the former decline either was cytokine induced or reflects instability of replicative DNA in regenerating hepatocytes. Virus titers in all four woodchucks were only transiently suppressed, suggesting that the effect of combination therapy is transient and, at least under the conditions used, does not cure chronic WHV infections.


Subject(s)
Adenoviridae/immunology , Hepatitis B Virus, Woodchuck/drug effects , Hepatitis B Virus, Woodchuck/immunology , Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy , Hepatitis B, Chronic/immunology , Immunotherapy , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Animals , Drug Therapy, Combination , Hepatitis B, Chronic/virology , Marmota/virology , Virus Replication/drug effects
4.
Hepatology ; 32(4 Pt 1): 828-34, 2000 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11003630

ABSTRACT

Lamivudine therapy induces improvements in chronic hepatitis B in a high proportion of patients, but prolonged therapy is limited by the development of viral resistance. We analyzed clinical responses and virologic resistance in 27 patients treated continuously with lamivudine for 2 to 4 years. Serum transaminases, hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA by both branched DNA (bDNA) signal amplification and quantitative polymerase chain reaction were monitored at 4- to 8-week intervals. Virologic resistance to lamivudine was confirmed by the presence of mutations in the YMDD motif of the polymerase gene by restriction fragment-length polymorphism analysis. Serum HBV-DNA levels decreased rapidly in all treated patients, falling by 4 to 5 logs within 1 year. Transaminase levels also decreased and were normal in 70% of patients at 1 year, at which point liver histology had improved in 81% of patients. Viral resistance began to emerge after 8 months of therapy, eventually developing in 14 patients, including 76% of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive patients but only 10% of HBeAg-negative patients. Lamivudine withdrawal led to reappearance of wild-type HBV species, but retreatment led to more rapid reappearance of the mutant virus. Clinical, serum biochemical, and histologic improvements were maintained in the 13 patients who did not develop resistance. Thus, long-term therapy with lamivudine resulted in maintained improvements in virologic, biochemical, and histologic features of disease in most patients with HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B and in the subgroup of HBeAg-positive patients with high serum transaminase levels. A high rate of resistance limited efficacy, particularly in patients who remained HBeAg positive on therapy.


Subject(s)
Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Adult , Aged , Alanine Transaminase/blood , DNA, Viral/analysis , Drug Resistance , Female , Hepatitis B Surface Antigens/analysis , Hepatitis B e Antigens/analysis , Hepatitis B, Chronic/pathology , Hepatitis B, Chronic/virology , Humans , Lamivudine/adverse effects , Liver/pathology , Male , Middle Aged
6.
Hepatology ; 31(1): 207-10, 2000 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10613747

ABSTRACT

The prognosis of decompensated cirrhosis resulting from chronic hepatitis B is poor, and the benefits of treatment with interferon are outweighed by serious side effects and by the risk of fatal exacerbation of disease activity. Lamivudine rapidly reduces hepatitis B virus (HBV)-DNA in serum to undetectable levels. We have treated 35 patients with chronic hepatitis B and decompensated cirrhosis with lamivudine 100 mg or 150 mg orally once daily. Pretreatment, all were positive for HBV-DNA in serum. Ten had Child-Pugh class B and 25 had Child-Pugh class C liver disease. Seven patients underwent liver transplantation within 6 months of treatment initiation, 5 patients died within 6 months, and 23 patients were treated for at least 6 months (mean = 19 months). In a majority of these 23 cases, there was a slow but marked improvement in liver function, which was most apparent after 9 months of treatment, with a decrease in serum bilirubin from 67 +/- 13 to 30 +/- 4 micromol/L (P <.05, baseline vs. 9 months), an increase in serum albumin from 27 +/- 1 to 34 +/- 1g/L (P <.05), and a decrease in Child-Pugh score from 10.3 +/- 0.4 to 7.5 +/- 0.5 (P <.05). Three patients developed resistance to lamivudine because of a mutation in the YMDD motif, but liver function did not deteriorate. We conclude that inhibition of viral replication with lamivudine results in a significant improvement of liver function in patients with decompensated HBV cirrhosis, but the long-term benefits remain uncertain.


Subject(s)
Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Liver Cirrhosis/drug therapy , Liver Cirrhosis/virology , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Bilirubin/blood , DNA, Viral/blood , Female , Hepatitis B Antibodies/blood , Hepatitis B e Antigens/blood , Hepatitis B virus/drug effects , Hepatitis B virus/genetics , Hepatitis B virus/immunology , Hepatitis B, Chronic/virology , Humans , Lamivudine/administration & dosage , Liver Transplantation , Male , Middle Aged , Survival Rate , Treatment Outcome , Virus Replication/drug effects
7.
J Infect Dis ; 180(6): 1757-62, 1999 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10558928

ABSTRACT

Hepatitis B viremia and emergence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) YMDD variants with reduced susceptibility to lamivudine were analyzed in patient sera from a phase II study of extended lamivudine therapy. Within 12 weeks, all patients exhibited a marked virologic response to lamivudine: >99% reduction (median 5 log decrease) in serum HBV DNA levels. Virus remained at >104 genomes/mL in 11 patients and decreased to <104 genomes/mL in the remaining 12 patients. In 10 patients, detectable YMDD variants emerged during the course of treatment. Six patients, including 3 with YMDD variants, experienced hepatitis B e antigen seroconversion while on lamivudine therapy or soon after its discontinuation. No patients with HBV DNA levels >104 genomes/mL seroconverted. Thus, patients who respond to lamivudine therapy with dramatic reductions in viral DNA level (to <104 genomes/mL) appear more likely to seroconvert than patients who do not achieve this level of HBV clearance.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Genetic Variation , Hepatitis B virus/isolation & purification , Hepatitis B, Chronic/virology , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Viremia/virology , DNA, Viral/analysis , DNA, Viral/blood , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Hepatitis B Antibodies/blood , Hepatitis B e Antigens/blood , Hepatitis B virus/genetics , Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy , Humans , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/therapeutic use
8.
N Engl J Med ; 341(17): 1256-63, 1999 Oct 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10528035

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND METHODS: Although the nucleoside analogue lamivudine has shown promise in patients with chronic hepatitis B, long-term data on patients from the United States are lacking. We randomly assigned previously untreated patients with chronic hepatitis B to receive either 100 mg of oral lamivudine or placebo daily for 52 weeks. We then followed them for an additional 16 weeks to evaluate post-treatment safety and the durability of responses. The primary end point with respect to efficacy was a reduction of at least 2 points in the score on the Histologic Activity Index. On this scale, scores can range from 0 (normal) to 22 (most severe abnormalities). RESULTS: Of the 143 randomized patients, 137 were included in the efficacy analysis: 66 in the lamivudine group and 71 in the placebo group. The other six patients were excluded at the base-line visit because of the absence of a documented history of hepatitis B surface antigen for at least six months. After 52 weeks of treatment, lamivudine recipients were more likely than placebo recipients to have a histologic response (52 percent vs. 23 percent, P<0.001), loss of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) in serum (32 percent vs. 11 percent, P=0.003), sustained suppression of serum hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA to undetectable levels (44 percent vs. 16 percent, P<0.001), and sustained normalization of serum alanine aminotransferase levels (41 percent vs. 7 percent, P<0.001), and they were less likely to have increased hepatic fibrosis (5 percent vs. 20 percent, P=0.01). Lamivudine recipients were also more likely to undergo HBeAg seroconversion, defined as the loss of HBeAg, undetectable levels of serum HBV DNA, and the appearance of antibodies against HBeAg (17 percent vs. 6 percent, P=0.04). HBeAg responses persisted in most patients for 16 weeks after the discontinuation of treatment. Lamivudine was well tolerated. Self-limited post-treatment elevations in serum alanine aminotransferase were more common in lamivudine recipients: 25 percent had serum alanine aminotransferase levels that were at least three times base-line levels, as compared with 8 percent of placebo recipients (P=0.01). The clinical condition of all patients remained stable during the study. CONCLUSIONS: In U.S. patients with previously untreated chronic hepatitis B, one year of lamivudine therapy had favorable effects on histologic, virologic, and biochemical features of the disease and was well tolerated. HBeAg responses were generally sustained after treatment.


Subject(s)
Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Alanine Transaminase/blood , DNA, Viral/blood , DNA, Viral/genetics , Double-Blind Method , Female , Hepatitis B e Antigens/blood , Hepatitis B virus/genetics , Hepatitis B, Chronic/blood , Hepatitis B, Chronic/pathology , Hepatitis B, Chronic/virology , Humans , Lamivudine/adverse effects , Liver/pathology , Male , Middle Aged , Mutation , Prospective Studies , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/adverse effects , United States
9.
J Clin Microbiol ; 37(10): 3338-47, 1999 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10488202

ABSTRACT

Two novel assays, a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) assay and an assay based on the 5'-nuclease activity of Taq DNA polymerase, were developed for screening viral variants in lamivudine-treated patients' sera containing <1,000 copies of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) genome per ml. Both assays were designed to detect single-nucleotide changes within the HBV DNA polymerase gene that are associated with lamivudine resistance in vitro and have been used to screen a number of patients' sera for variant virus. Results obtained with these assays and standard sequencing technology were compared with regard to throughput, ability to detect individual virus species present at low concentrations, and ability to detect, distinguish, and quantitate wild-type (wt) and HBV tyrosine methionine(552) aspartate aspartate motif variants in mixed viral populations. Unlike DNA sequencing, both assays are amenable to high-throughput screening and were shown to be able to quantitatively detect variant virus in the presence of a background of wt virus. As with DNA sequencing, both new assays incorporate a PCR amplification step and are able to detect the relatively low amounts of virus found in lamivudine-treated patients' sera. However, these assays are far less labor intensive than the DNA-sequencing techniques presently in use. Overall, the RFLP assay was more sensitive than DNA sequencing in detecting and determining the ratios of wt to variant virus. Furthermore, the RFLP assay and 5'-nuclease assay were equally sensitive in the detection of mixed viral species, but the RFLP assay was superior to the 5'-nuclease assay in the quantitation of mixed viral species. These assays should prove useful for further understanding of virological response to therapy and disease progression.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/pharmacology , Hepatitis B virus/classification , Lamivudine/pharmacology , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , DNA, Viral/analysis , Hepatitis B virus/drug effects , Humans , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , Sensitivity and Specificity
10.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother ; 43(8): 1947-54, 1999 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10428918

ABSTRACT

Lamivudine [(-)-beta-L-2',3'-dideoxy-3'-thiacytidine] reduces woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) titers in the sera of chronically infected woodchucks by inhibiting viral DNA synthesis. However, after 6 to 12 months, WHV titers begin to increase toward pretreatment levels. Three WHV variants with mutations in the active site of the DNA polymerase gene are present at this time (W. S. Mason et al., Virology 245:18-32, 1998). We have asked if these mutant viruses were responsible for the lamivudine resistance and if their emergence caused an immediate rise in virus titers. Cell cultures studies implied that the mutants were resistant to lamivudine. Emergence of mutant WHV was not always associated, however, with an immediate rise in virus titers in the serum. One of the three types of mutant viruses became prominent in serum up to 7 months before titers in serum actually began to increase, at a time when wild-type virus was still predominant in the liver. The two other mutants did not show this behavior but were detected in serum and liver later, just at the time that virus titers began to rise. A factor linking all three mutants was that a similar duration of drug administration preceded the rise in titers, irrespective of which mutant ultimately prevailed. A simple explanation for these results is that the increase in virus titers following emergence of drug-resistant mutants can occur only as the preexisting wild-type virus is cleared from the hepatocyte population, allowing spread of the mutants. Thus, prolonged suppression of virus titers in the serum may sometimes be a measure of the stability of hepatocyte infection rather than of a successful therapeutic outcome.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/pharmacology , Hepatitis B Virus, Woodchuck/genetics , Hepatitis B/drug therapy , Hepatitis B/virology , Lamivudine/pharmacology , Marmota/virology , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Drug Resistance, Microbial/genetics , Genotype , Hepatitis B/enzymology , Hepatitis B Virus, Woodchuck/drug effects , Hepatitis B Virus, Woodchuck/growth & development , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Mutation , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
11.
Hepatology ; 30(1): 244-56, 1999 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10385663

ABSTRACT

Famciclovir (FCV) and lamivudine (LAM) reduce viral replication in patients with recurrent hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). Eighteen of 20 patients with insufficient response to FCV were treated with 100 mg LAM daily after OLT. These patients had shown nonresponse (n = 5), partial response (n = 7), or breakthrough (n = 6) during FCV therapy. Despite passive immunoprophylaxis with hepatitis B immunoglobulin after liver transplantation, HBV reinfection had occurred in 14 of 15 transplanted patients. HBV-DNA levels and the regions A to E of the HBV-DNA polymerase gene were analyzed before and after treatment failure to either therapy. Within 4 weeks on LAM, all but 1 patient showed a 95% average reduction of the HBV-DNA level. As with FCV, we did not observe any severe side-effects attributable to LAM. However, 7 patients developed a breakthrough within 12, 29 (n = 2), 32, 37, 54, and 145 weeks under treatment with LAM associated with the methionine-to-valine signature mutation (M552V) in the YMDD motif in all. With FCV, no unique, but a dominant, resistance pattern with the L528M mutation was identified for patients with breakthrough under FCV. In contrast, nonresponders or patients with partial response to FCV did not exhibit such mutations. Our results indicate that the L528M mutation is a risk factor for LAM breakthrough, because breakthrough during LAM occurred earlier in patients with this mutation (50 +/- 10 weeks vs. 120 +/- 21 weeks). Because breakthrough on either treatment is frequent for this specific group of patients, the use of combination therapy should be explored.


Subject(s)
2-Aminopurine/analogs & derivatives , Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/genetics , Hepatitis B virus/genetics , Hepatitis B/virology , Immunization, Passive , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Liver Transplantation , Point Mutation , 2-Aminopurine/therapeutic use , Adult , Amino Acid Substitution , DNA Primers , Famciclovir , Female , Hepatitis B/prevention & control , Hepatitis B/therapy , Hepatitis B e Antigens/blood , Hepatitis B virus/enzymology , Hepatitis B virus/isolation & purification , Humans , Immunoglobulins , Male , Methionine , Middle Aged , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Prodrugs/therapeutic use , Recurrence , Risk Factors , Valine
12.
Virology ; 245(1): 18-32, 1998 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9614864

ABSTRACT

Hepatitis B viruses establish a chronic, productive, and noncytopathic infection of hepatocytes. Viral products are produced by transcription from multiple copies (5-50) of covalently closed circular (ccc) viral DNA. This cccDNA does not replicate, but can be replaced by DNA precursors that are synthesized in the cytoplasm. The present study was carried out to determine if long-term treatment with an inhibitor of viral DNA synthesis would lead to loss of virus products, including cccDNA, from the liver of woodchucks chronically infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus. Viral DNA synthesis was inhibited with the nucleoside analog, lamivudine (2'-deoxy-3'-thiacytidine). Lamivudine treatment produced a slow but progressive decline in viral titers in serum, to about 0.3% or less of the initial level. However, even after maintenance of drug therapy for 3-12 months, > 95% of the hepatocytes in most animals were still infected. Significant declines in the percentage of infected hepatocytes and of intrahepatic cccDNA levels were observed in only three woodchucks, two in the group receiving lamivudine and one in the placebo control group. Moreover, virus titers eventually rose in woodchucks receiving lamivudine, suggesting that drug-resistant viruses began to spread through the liver starting at least as early as 9-12 months of treatment. Three types of mutation that may be associated with drug resistance were found at this time, in a region upstream of the YMDD motif in the active site of the viral reverse transcriptase. The YMDD motif itself remained unchanged. Not unexpectedly, the lamivudine therapy did not have a impact on development of liver cancer.


Subject(s)
Hepatitis B virus/isolation & purification , Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , DNA Replication/drug effects , DNA, Viral/drug effects , DNA, Viral/genetics , Hepatitis B virus/physiology , Marmota , Molecular Sequence Data , Virus Replication/drug effects
13.
Hepatology ; 27(6): 1670-7, 1998 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9620341

ABSTRACT

Cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma occur as long-term complications of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. Antiviral therapy is potentially a successful approach for the treatment of patients with HBV infection, which includes the nucleoside analog, lamivudine [(-)2'-deoxy-3'-thiacytidine, 3TC]. Although resistance to lamivudine therapy has been reported in several HBV-infected patients, the pattern of resistance-associated mutations in HBV has not been fully characterized. We report a DNA sequence database that includes a 500-base pair region of the HBV polymerase gene from 20 patients with clinical manifestations of lamivudine resistance. Analysis of the database reveals two patterns of amino acid substitutions in the tyrosine, methionine, aspartate, aspartate (YMDD) nucleotide-binding locus of the HBV polymerase. HBV DNA from the sera of patients in Group I exhibits a substitution of valine for methionine at residue 552, accompanied by a substitution of methionine for leucine at residue 528. Patients in Group II had only an isoleucine-for-methionine substitution at position 552. Reconstruction of these mutations in an HBV replication-competent plasmid was performed in a transient transfection cell assay to determine the function/relevance of these mutations to lamivudine resistance. Both Group I and Group II mutations resulted in a substantial decrease in sensitivity to lamivudine treatment (> 10,000-fold shift in IC50 over wild-type [wt] IC50), strongly indicating that these mutations were involved in resistance to lamivudine. A hypothetical model of the HBV reverse transcriptase has been generated for further study of the role of these mutations in lamivudine resistance.


Subject(s)
Drug Resistance, Microbial/genetics , Hepatitis B virus/drug effects , Hepatitis B virus/genetics , Hepatitis B/virology , Lamivudine/pharmacology , Mutation , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Amino Acid Sequence , Amino Acid Substitution , Genes, Viral , Hepatitis B/drug therapy , Humans , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Molecular Sequence Data , Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/therapeutic use
15.
Lancet ; 349(9044): 20-2, 1997 Jan 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8988118

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Orthotopic liver transplantation for end-stage hepatitis-B-virus (HBV) infection is commonly complicated by recurrence of HBV. Lamivudine, a cytosine nucleoside analogue, has been shown to suppress HBV infection. We report the development of resistance to lamivudine in three patients who underwent transplantation for end-stage liver disease secondary to hepatitis B. METHODS: Two of the patients received lamivudine for recurrent HBV infection after transplantation, whereas the third patient began treatment 1 month before transplantation in an attempt to prevent HBV recurrence after transplantation. The three patients initially responded well to treatment, but viral recurrence occurred after 9-10 months of treatment in all patients. HBV DNA was amplified from serum and sequenced through a conserved polymerase domain-the tyrosine, methionine, aspartate, aspartate (YMDD) locus. We assessed the susceptibility of HBV to lamivudine by infecting primary human hepatocytes with serum taken before the start of treatment and after recurrence in varying concentrations of lamivudine. FINDINGS: DNA sequencing showed a common mutation within the YMDD locus of the HBV polymerase gene in all patients during lamivudine treatment. In hepatocyte cultures infected with pretreatment serum, HBV DNA concentrations were reduced to less than 6% of those in control cultures by addition of lamivudine in concentrations as low as 0.03 mumol/L. By contrast, in cultures treated with serum taken after recurrence, HBV DNA concentrations did not fall below 20% of control values, even with lamivudine at 30 mumol/L. INTERPRETATION: Resistance to lamivudine has been reported in HIV patients with mutations in the YMDD locus of the polymerase gene. Our findings indicate a common mechanism of lamivudine resistance for HIV and HBV that involves similar point mutations in homologous domains of the viral polymerases.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/pharmacology , Hepatitis B virus/drug effects , Hepatitis B/drug therapy , Lamivudine/pharmacology , Liver Transplantation , DNA, Viral/analysis , DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/genetics , Drug Resistance, Microbial/genetics , Hepatitis B/complications , Hepatitis B/virology , Hepatitis B virus/enzymology , Hepatitis B virus/genetics , Humans , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Liver Failure/etiology , Liver Failure/surgery , Male , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Middle Aged , Point Mutation , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Recurrence
16.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother ; 40(2): 520-3, 1996 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8834915

ABSTRACT

The anti-hepatitis B virus (HBV) activity of (-)-cis-5-fluoro-1-[2-(hydroxymethyl)-1,3-oxathiolan-5-yl]cytosine (524W91) in cultures of primary human hepatocytes was examined. 524W91 was anabolized to the active 5'-triphosphate in these cells. HBV replication was equally inhibited in cultures incubated with 524W91 when the drug was added 24 h preinfection, at infection, or 24 h postinfection. 524W91 inhibited HBV replication by 50% at less than 20 nM in human hepatocytes.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/pharmacology , Hepatitis B virus/drug effects , Liver/drug effects , Virus Replication/drug effects , Zalcitabine/analogs & derivatives , Blotting, Southern , Cells, Cultured , Emtricitabine/analogs & derivatives , Hepatitis B virus/physiology , Humans , Liver/virology , Time Factors , Zalcitabine/pharmacology
17.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother ; 38(3): 616-9, 1994 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7515609

ABSTRACT

A murine model was developed to investigate the in vivo activity of anti-hepatitis B virus (HBV) agents. Mice with subcutaneous tumors of HBV-producing 2.2.15 cells showed reductions in levels of HBV in serum and in intracellular levels of HBV when the mice were orally dosed with (-) cis-5-fluoro-1-[2-(hydroxymethyl)-1,3-oxathiolan-5-yl]cytosine (FTC). No effects on tumor size or alpha-fetoprotein levels were observed. FTC can selectively inhibit HBV replication at nontoxic doses.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Hepatitis B/drug therapy , Zalcitabine/analogs & derivatives , Animals , Biological Availability , Cell Line , DNA, Viral/biosynthesis , Emtricitabine/analogs & derivatives , Hepatitis B/microbiology , Hepatitis B virus/drug effects , Humans , Mice , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Virus Replication/drug effects , Zalcitabine/therapeutic use , alpha-Fetoproteins/metabolism
18.
Antiviral Res ; 20(3): 235-47, 1993 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8470884

ABSTRACT

Hypericin was found to be active against a member of the hepatitis B virus family, duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV). After a single 1 h incubation with hypericin, cells stably-transfected with a clone of DHBV stopped producing infectious virus for several days, though virus-like particles continued to be released into the culture medium. Characterization of these virions revealed a buoyant density characteristic of infectious virus preparations and lower than that of virus cores, suggesting that the particles were enveloped. Western blot analysis suggested, however, that the viral preS protein in surface antigen particles and, by inference, in virions, was present in covalently cross-linked aggregates. Evidence of a similar level of aggregation of the core subunit of virion nucleocapsids was not found, nor was there evidence of a similar high level of aggregation of cell-associated core and preS proteins. Hypericin was only slightly virucidal against DHBV and culture medium from treated cultures did not block initiation of infection when added to DHBV susceptible cultures prior to a challenge with infectious DHBV. Thus, the primary antiviral activity of hypericin against DHBV replication appears to be exerted at a late step in viral morphogenesis.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/pharmacology , Hepatitis B Virus, Duck/drug effects , Perylene/analogs & derivatives , Virus Replication/drug effects , Animals , Anthracenes , Blotting, Western , Cell Line , DNA Replication/drug effects , DNA, Viral/biosynthesis , Depression, Chemical , Ducks , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Hepatitis B Virus, Duck/physiology , Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors , Perylene/pharmacology , Viral Envelope Proteins/biosynthesis
19.
Virology ; 188(1): 208-16, 1992 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1566574

ABSTRACT

We have examined the consequences on duck hepatitis B virus DNA synthesis of deleting the 5' and 3' copies of the 12 base sequence, DR1, from the viral pregenome. With the wild-type virus, reverse transcription initiates at nt 2537 within the 3' copy of DR1. When this sequence was deleted, initiation of reverse transcription was found at two other sites located closer to the 3' end of the pregenome (nt 2576 and nt 2644). The 3-base motif UUA was the only sequence common to these sites as well as the wild-type initiation site in DR1. Deletion of the 5' copy of DR1 did not alter minus strand synthesis, but led to aberrant priming of plus strand synthesis to generate predominantly linear rather than relaxed circular, double-stranded viral DNA, in agreement with the recent report by Loeb et al. (EMBO J. 10, 3533-3540, 1991). A mutant lacking only the 3' copy of DR1 rapidly converted to wild type in transfected cells. This apparently occurred as a consequence of conversion of newly synthesized relaxed circular to covalently closed circular (CCC) DNA, which might then serve as a template for the synthesis of wild-type viral RNAs. A mutant lacking only the 5' copy of DR1 did not exhibit this behavior. These results support the conclusion that amplified CCC DNA serves as transcriptional template.


Subject(s)
DNA Replication , DNA, Viral/biosynthesis , Hepatitis B Virus, Duck/genetics , Mutation , Animals , Base Sequence , Chickens , Cloning, Molecular , Genome, Viral , Molecular Sequence Data , Transcription, Genetic , Transfection , Tumor Cells, Cultured
20.
Virology ; 184(1): 242-52, 1991 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1871970

ABSTRACT

The core gene promoter of duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) has been localized and an enhancer element has been found in a region of the DHBV genome immediately upstream of the core promoter. This enhancer was able to activate expression from both the core promoter and the S promoter of DHBV, as well as from the heterologous thymidine kinase and simian virus 40 early promoters, but not from the DHBV PreS promoter, which was active both in the absence and in the presence of the enhancer. The activity of the enhancer showed a preference for cell cultures of hepatic origin, suggesting a possible tissue preference in vivo.


Subject(s)
Enhancer Elements, Genetic , Genes, Viral , Hepatitis B Virus, Duck/genetics , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Animals , Chromosome Deletion , Genetic Vectors , Growth Hormone/genetics , Humans , Plasmids , Restriction Mapping , Transfection
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