Author: Boldanova, Tujana; Suslov, Aleksei; Heim, Markus H; Necsulea, Anamaria
                    Title: Transcriptional response to hepatitis C virus infection and interferonâ€alpha treatment in the human liver  Cord-id: 1aezgrn2  Document date: 2017_3_30
                    ID: 1aezgrn2
                    
                    Snippet: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is widely used to investigate host–virus interactions. Cellular responses to HCV infection have been extensively studied in vitro. However, in human liver, interferon (IFN)â€stimulated gene expression can mask direct transcriptional responses to infection. To better characterize the direct effects of HCV infection in vivo, we analyze the transcriptomes of HCVâ€infected patients lacking an activated endogenous IFN system. We show that expression changes observed in the
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is widely used to investigate host–virus interactions. Cellular responses to HCV infection have been extensively studied in vitro. However, in human liver, interferon (IFN)â€stimulated gene expression can mask direct transcriptional responses to infection. To better characterize the direct effects of HCV infection in vivo, we analyze the transcriptomes of HCVâ€infected patients lacking an activated endogenous IFN system. We show that expression changes observed in these patients predominantly reflect immune cell infiltrates rather than cellâ€intrinsic pathways. We also investigate the transcriptomes of patients with endogenous IFN activation, which paradoxically cannot eradicate viral infection. We find that most IFNâ€stimulated genes are induced by both recombinant IFN therapy and the endogenous IFN system, but with lower induction levels in the latter, indicating that the innate immune response in chronic hepatitis C is too weak to clear the virus. We show that coding and nonâ€coding transcripts have different expression dynamics following IFN treatment. Several microRNA primary transcripts, including that of miRâ€122, are significantly downâ€regulated in response to IFN treatment, suggesting a new mechanism for IFNâ€induced expression fineâ€tuning.
 
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