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J Gen Virol 85 (2004), 947-957; DOI 10.1099/vir.0.19661-0

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© 2004 Society for General Microbiology

Hepatitis D virus RNA editing is inhibited by a GFP fusion protein containing a C-terminally deleted delta antigen

Ko-Nien Shih1,{dagger}, Ya-Ting Chuang1, Hsuan Liu2 and Szecheng J. Lo1,2,3

1 Institute of Microbiology and Immunology, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan 112
2 Department of Life Science, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan 112
3 Department of Life Science, School of Medicine, Chang Gung University, TaoYun, Taiwan 333

Correspondence
Szecheng J. Lo
losj{at}mail.cgu.edu.tw

During its life cycle, hepatitis D virus (HDV) produces two forms of delta antigen (HDAg), small delta antigen (SDAg) and large delta antigen (LDAg), which differ in their C-terminal 19 amino acids. Host enzymes termed ADARs (adenosine deaminases that act on double-stranded RNA) are required for LDAg production. These enzymes change the stop codon (UAG) of SDAg to a tryptophan codon (UGG). However, the temporal and spatial regulation of HDV RNA editing is largely unknown. In this study, we constructed three GFP fusion proteins containing different lengths of SDAg and characterized their cellular localization and effects on HDV replication. One of these fusion proteins, designated D(1–88)-GFP, inhibited LDAg but not SDAg production, suggesting that D(1–88)-GFP inhibits HDV RNA editing. Two experiments further supported this supposition: (i) RT-PCR analysis combined with NcoI restriction enzyme digestion revealed that HDV RNA editing was reduced by 42 % in HeLa-D(1–88)-GFP when compared with HeLa cells; and (ii) the ratio of SDAg/LDAg production from the reporter RNAs was reduced in cells co-transfected with ADAR-expressing and reporter plasmids in the presence of D(1–88)-GFP. Double fluorescence microscopy found that D(1–88)-GFP was either associated with SC-35 or was adjacent to PML (premyelocytic leukaemia antigen) at nuclear speckles, but D(1–88)-GFP was not co-localized with ADAR, which was mainly located in the nucleolus. In situ hybridization showing co-localization of HDV RNA with D(1–88)-GFP at nuclear speckles suggested that HDV RNA editing might occur in the nuclear speckles and require other nuclear factor(s), in addition to ADAR.

{dagger}Present address: Department of Radiological Technology, Yuanpei University of Science and Technology, Hsinchu, Taiwan 300.




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