Hepatitis B virus is a stealth virus that minimizes proteomic and secretomic changes in primary human hepatocytes
Karolína Štaflová, Kamila Clarová, Michal Doležal, Martin Hubálek, Alena Křenková, Jan Hodek, Iva Pichová, Aleš Zábranský

TL;DR
This study shows that Hepatitis B virus causes minimal changes in liver cell proteins, supporting its classification as a stealth virus.
Contribution
The study identifies reticulocalbin-2 as a novel host factor downregulated during HBV infection.
Findings
HBV induces only subtle changes in host proteome and secretome despite active replication.
Reticulocalbin-2 is downregulated during productive HBV infection.
Knockdown of identified proteins does not affect viral replication markers.
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a hepatotropic DNA virus that infects over 250 million people worldwide and causes serious liver diseases. HBV infection can modulate host cellular processes, potentially inducing proteomic changes in hepatocytes. In this study, we investigated how acute HBV infection alters the proteome and secretome of primary human hepatocytes, a physiologically relevant in vitro model that retains essential liver-specific functions. Protein-level changes in cell lysates and culture supernatants were quantified 8 days post-infection using data-independent acquisition MS. We used HBV infection in the presence of the entry inhibitor bulevirtide as a control to separate the effects of productive infection from those caused by inoculum-associated components. Despite robust infection, active HBV replication induced only subtle changes in host protein levels. Orthogonal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHepatitis B Virus Studies · Hepatitis C virus research · Liver physiology and pathology
