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FOR RELEASE
Thursday, August 8, 2002
Contact: Anne A. Oplinger
(301) 402-1663
aoplinger@niaid.nih.gov
Cause of Hepatitis A Virulence Pinpointed
Researchers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID) have located two genes that give hepatitis A virus (HAV)
its virulent properties. The team, led by Suzanne Emerson, Ph.D., also
has discovered that deliberately weakened HAV can quickly revert to its
naturally occurring, infection-causing form. To be published in the
September 1 issue of Journal of Virology, and appearing online
this week, these findings indicate that making an improved vaccine for
HAV will be a very difficult task.
"As sanitation improves in developing countries, there will be an
increased need for inexpensive and easy-to-administer vaccines to
prevent hepatitis A, which is transmitted through contaminated food and
water," notes Dr. Emerson. HAV is so common in developing countries that
almost everyone is infected during childhood (often without becoming
noticeably ill) and thereafter is immune to the virus. Improvements in
sanitation and water quality, though, make such naturally acquired
immunity less likely. Unfortunately, if HAV infection occurs for the
first time later in life, it can result in dangerous illness, including
severe liver damage.
A vaccine made from killed HAV does exist, but it requires multiple
booster shots to be given intramuscularly-an expense and inconvenience
that inhibits its use in less developed countries. Scientists at NIAID
have been attempting to develop a live, attenuated HAV vaccine. An
attenuated vaccine-one made from a deliberately weakened form of the
virus-could be given orally in a single dose, a clear advantage to the
existing vaccine.
To develop such a vaccine, Dr. Emerson and her coworkers first had to
determine which genes give HAV its punch. They compared the genetic
make-up of a virulent version of human HAV with that of an attenuated
version of the same strain of virus by creating 14 artificial "chimeric"
viruses, each of which contained a different combination of genes taken
from the parent strains. Monkeys exposed to a virus that contained
either of two genes, 2C or VP1/2A, from the virulent parent developed
symptoms of hepatitis. When both genes from the virulent parent were
present, the disease was markedly more severe. Conversely, chimeras
containing mutated forms of 2C and VP1/2A did not cause disease.
Weakening HAV by altering its two virulence-determining genes would
seem to be a logical way to produce a hepatitis A vaccine. But when the
researchers infected monkeys with just such an attenuated virus, it
mutated within those animals, although it did not cause disease. Feces
from the animals, however, contained infectious particles that could
cause hepatitis in other monkeys.
"Although these results suggest that a live, attenuated HAV vaccine
may be difficult to develop, they do help us better understand what
controls HAV growth," notes Dr. Emerson. "Ultimately, this knowledge may
provide us with a roadmap to a less expensive and more potent killed
vaccine that could be used worldwide."
Reference:
SU Emerson et al. Identification of VP1/2A and 2C as
virulence genes of hepatitis A and demonstration of genetic instability
of 2C. Journal of Virology. 76 (17), pp. 8551-59 (2002).
Available online at http://jvi.asm.org/.
NIAID is a component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
NIAID supports basic and applied research to prevent, diagnose, and
treat infectious and immune-mediated illnesses, including HIV/AIDS and
other sexually transmitted diseases, illness from potential agents of
bioterrorism, tuberculosis, malaria, autoimmune disorders, asthma and
allergies.
Press releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related
materials are available on the NIAID Web site at
http://www.niaid.nih.gov.
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