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Christine I Wooddell

Christine I Wooddell

Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals, USA

Title: Integrated hepatitis B virus DNA is a source of HBsAg

Biography

Biography: Christine I Wooddell

Abstract

Statement of the Problem: Worldwide, 250-400 million people are chronically infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV), leading to 800,000 deaths per year from liver cirrhosis, liver failure and hepatocellular carcinoma. Highly expressed viral proteins, thought to be transcribed from viral covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA), play a role in chronicity. Nucleos (t) ide viral replication inhibitors (NUCs) do not reduce viral proteins. RNA interference (RNAi) therapeutic ARC-520 was developed to reduce all viral proteins and pre-genomic RNA. In human clinical trials, Heparc-2001 with ARC-520, HBV S antigen (HBsAg) was strongly reduced in treatment where naïve patients were positive for HBV e antigen (HBeAg) but was significantly less reduced in patients that were HBeAg negative or had received long-term therapy with NUCs.

 

Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: The molecular basis for this unexpected differential response was investigated by multiple approaches in chimpanzees chronically infected with HBV and treated with monthly dosing of ARC-520 in the presence of NUCs. Liver HBV mRNA was quantified and sequenced using RT-qPCR, mRNA-seq and Iso-seq. Liver HBV DNA was also quantified and sequenced.

 

Findings: HBsAg was expressed not only in the episomal cccDNA mini chromosome, but also in transcription of HBV DNA integrated into the host genome, which was a significant source in HBeAg negative chimpanzees. Many of these integrant-derived transcripts lacked target sites for the siRNAs in ARC-520, explaining the reduced response in HBeAg negative chimpanzees and by extension in HBeAg negative patients. Treatment of the HBeAg negative chimpanzees with siRNA hypothesized to target mRNA produced by integrated HBV resulted in deep HBsAg reductions similar to those in the HBeAg positive chimpanzees.

 

Conclusion & Significance: These results uncover an under-recognized source of HBsAg that may play a key role in maintaining chronicity, a finding expected to alter clinical trial design and endpoint expectations for new HBV therapies. Treatment of chronically HBV-infected chimpanzees with ARC-520.