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Dive into the research topics where Carol E. Aldrich is active.

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Featured researches published by Carol E. Aldrich.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Kinetics of Hepadnavirus Loss from the Liver during Inhibition of Viral DNA Synthesis

Yuao Zhu; Toshiki Yamamoto; John M. Cullen; Jeffry Saputelli; Carol E. Aldrich; Darren S. Miller; Samuel Litwin; Phillip A. Furman; Allison R. Jilbert; William S. Mason

ABSTRACT Hepadnaviruses replicate by reverse transcription, which takes place in the cytoplasm of the infected hepatocyte. Viral RNAs, including the pregenome, are transcribed from a covalently closed circular (ccc) viral DNA that is found in the nucleus. Inhibitors of the viral reverse transcriptase can block new DNA synthesis but have no direct effect on the up to 50 or more copies of cccDNA that maintain the infected state. Thus, during antiviral therapy, the rates of loss of cccDNA, infected hepatocytes (1 or more molecules of cccDNA), and replicating DNAs may be quite different. In the present study, we asked how these losses compared when woodchucks chronically infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus were treated with L-FMAU [1-(2-fluoro-5-methyl-β-l-arabinofuranosyl) uracil], an inhibitor of viral DNA synthesis. Viremia was suppressed for at least 8 months, after which drug-resistant virus began replicating to high titers. In addition, replicating viral DNAs were virtually absent from the liver after 6 weeks of treatment. In contrast, cccDNA declined more slowly, consistent with a half-life of ∼33 to 50 days. The loss of cccDNA was comparable to that expected from the estimated death rate of hepatocytes in these woodchucks, suggesting that death of infected cells was one of the major routes for elimination of cccDNA. However, the decline in the actual number of infected hepatocytes lagged behind the decline in cccDNA, so that the average cccDNA copy number in infected cells dropped during the early phase of therapy. This observation was consistent with the possibility that some fraction of cccDNA was distributed to daughter cells in those infected hepatocytes that passed through mitosis.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Apoptosis and Regeneration of Hepatocytes during Recovery from Transient Hepadnavirus Infections

Ju-Tao Guo; Huan Zhou; Chen Liu; Carol E. Aldrich; Jeffrey Saputelli; Tony Whitaker; M. Inmaculada Barrasa; William S. Mason; Christoph Seeger

ABSTRACT It is well known that hepatitis B virus infections can be transient or chronic, but the basis for this dichotomy is not known. To gain insight into the mechanism responsible for the clearance of hepadnavirus infections, we have performed a molecular and histologic analysis of liver tissues obtained from transiently infected woodchucks during the critical phase of the recovery period. We found as expected that clearance from transient infections occurred subsequent to the appearance of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and the production of interferon gamma and tumor necrosis factor alpha in the infected liver. These events were accompanied by a significant increase in apoptosis and regeneration of hepatocytes. Surprisingly, however, accumulation of virus-free hepatocytes was delayed for several weeks following this initial influx of lymphocytes. In addition, we observed that chronically infected animals can exhibit levels of T-cell accumulation, cytokine expression, and apoptosis that are comparable with those observed during the initial phase of transient infections. Our results are most consistent with a model for recovery predicting replacement of infected hepatocytes with regenerated cells, which by unknown mechanisms remain protected from reinfection in animals that can be cured.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Hepatocyte turnover during resolution of a transient hepadnaviral infection

Jesse Summers; Allison R. Jilbert; Wengang Yang; Carol E. Aldrich; Jeffry Saputelli; Samuel Litwin; Eugene Toll; William S. Mason

We estimated the amount of hepatocyte turnover in the livers of three woodchucks undergoing clearance of a transient woodchuck hepatitis infection by determining the fate of integrated viral DNA as a genetic marker of the infected cell population. Integrated viral DNA was found to persist in liver tissue from recovered animals at essentially undiminished levels of 1 viral genome per 1,000–3,000 liver cells, suggesting that the hepatocytes in the recovered liver were derived primarily from the infected cell population. We determined the single and multicopy distribution of distinct viral cell junctions isolated from small pieces of liver after clearance of the infection to determine the cumulative amount of hepatocyte proliferation that had occurred during recovery. We estimated that proliferation was equivalent to a minimum of 0.7–1 complete random turnovers of the hepatocyte population of the liver. Our results indicated that during resolution of the transient infections a large fraction of the infected hepatocyte population was killed and replaced by hepatocyte cell division.


Virology | 1983

Experimental transmission of duck hepatitis B virus

William S. Mason; Michael S. Halpern; James M. England; Geeta Seal; John Egan; Laura Coates; Carol E. Aldrich; Jesse Summers

Susceptibility to experimental infection with duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV) was explored, with the objective of defining procedures that were both rapid and reproducible. For the purpose of these experiments, a small flock of DHBV-free breeders was established as a source of susceptible eggs and ducklings, since ca. 10% of the ducks (all ages) from commercial flocks were DHBV infected. Intravenous inoculation of DHBV into 15-day duck embryos from the DHBV-free flock produced a persistent infection, with a high-titer viremia, in at least 80% of the injected animals. The tissue tropism of DHBV in these experimentally infected animals was similar to that associated with natural, congenital infections from viremic ducks to their progeny. Virus antigen was found not only in hepatocytes and bile duct epithelium of liver, but also in cells associated with exocrine and endocrine pancreas, and in proximal convoluted tubular epithelium of kidney. Infection of embryonic liver was rapid, as evidenced by active synthesis of DHBV-DNA by reverse-transcription of RNA by 24 hr postinjection. During this latter analysis, formation of supercoiled viral DNA appeared to precede the reverse-transcription phase of viral DNA synthesis, suggesting that this species may be important in initiation of infection.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2012

Identification of Disubstituted Sulfonamide Compounds as Specific Inhibitors of Hepatitis B Virus Covalently Closed Circular DNA Formation

Dawei Cai; Courtney Mills; Wenquan Yu; Ran Yan; Carol E. Aldrich; Jeffry Saputelli; William S. Mason; Xiaodong Xu; Ju-Tao Guo; Timothy M. Block; Andrea Cuconati; Haitao Guo

ABSTRACT Hepatitis B virus (HBV) covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) plays a central role in viral infection and persistence and is the basis for viral rebound after the cessation of therapy, as well as the elusiveness of a cure even after extended treatment. Therefore, there is an urgent need for the development of novel therapeutic agents that directly target cccDNA formation and maintenance. By employing an innovative cell-based cccDNA assay in which secreted HBV e antigen is a cccDNA-dependent surrogate, we screened an in-house small-molecule library consisting of 85,000 drug-like compounds. Two structurally related disubstituted sulfonamides (DSS), termed CCC-0975 and CCC-0346, emerged and were confirmed as inhibitors of cccDNA production, with low micromolar 50% effective concentrations (EC50s) in cell culture. Further mechanistic studies demonstrated that DSS compound treatment neither directly inhibited HBV DNA replication in cell culture nor reduced viral polymerase activity in the in vitro endogenous polymerase assay but synchronously reduced the levels of HBV cccDNA and its putative precursor, deproteinized relaxed circular DNA (DP-rcDNA). However, DSS compounds did not promote the intracellular decay of HBV DP-rcDNA and cccDNA, suggesting that the compounds interfere primarily with rcDNA conversion into cccDNA. In addition, we demonstrated that CCC-0975 was able to reduce cccDNA biosynthesis in duck HBV-infected primary duck hepatocytes. This is the first attempt, to our knowledge, to identify small molecules that target cccDNA formation, and DSS compounds thus potentially serve as proof-of-concept drug candidates for development into therapeutics to eliminate cccDNA from chronic HBV infection.


Journal of Virology | 2010

Clonal Expansion of Normal-Appearing Human Hepatocytes during Chronic Hepatitis B Virus Infection

William S. Mason; Chen Liu; Carol E. Aldrich; Samuel Litwin; Matthew M. Yeh

ABSTRACT Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections are associated with persistent immune killing of infected hepatocytes. Hepatocytes constitute a largely self-renewing population. Thus, immune killing may exert selective pressure on the population, leading it to evolve in order to survive. A gradual course of hepatocyte evolution toward an HBV-resistant state is suggested by the substantial decline in the fraction of infected hepatocytes that occurs during the course of chronic infections. Consistent with hepatocyte evolution, clones of >1,000 hepatocytes develop postinfection in the noncirrhotic livers of chimpanzees chronically infected with HBV and of woodchucks infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (W. S. Mason, A. R. Jilbert, and J. Summers, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 102:1139-1144, 2005; W. S. Mason et al., J. Virol. 83:8396-8408, 2009). The present study was carried out to determine (i) if extensive clonal expansion of hepatocytes also occurred in human HBV carriers, particularly in the noncirrhotic liver, and (ii) if clonal expansion included normal-appearing hepatocytes, not just hepatocytes that appear premalignant. Host DNA extracted from fragments of noncancerous liver, collected during surgical resection of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), was analyzed by inverse PCR for randomly integrated HBV DNA as a marker of expanding hepatocyte lineages. This analysis detected extensive clonal expansion of hepatocytes, as previously found in chronically infected chimpanzees and woodchucks. Tissue sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), and DNA was extracted from the adjacent section for inverse PCR to detect integrated HBV DNA. This analysis revealed that clonal expansion can occur among normal-appearing human hepatocytes.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Detection of Clonally Expanded Hepatocytes in Chimpanzees with Chronic Hepatitis B Virus Infection

William S. Mason; Huey Chi Low; Chunxiao Xu; Carol E. Aldrich; Catherine A. Scougall; Arend Grosse; Andrew D. Clouston; Deborah Chavez; Samuel Litwin; Suraj Peri; Allison R. Jilbert; Robert E. Lanford

ABSTRACT During a hepadnavirus infection, viral DNA integrates at a low rate into random sites in the host DNA, producing unique virus-cell junctions detectable by inverse nested PCR (invPCR). These junctions serve as genetic markers of individual hepatocytes, providing a means to detect their subsequent proliferation into clones of two or more hepatocytes. A previous study suggested that the livers of 2.4-year-old woodchucks (Marmota monax) chronically infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus contained at least 100,000 clones of >1,000 hepatocytes (W. S. Mason, A. R. Jilbert, and J. Summers, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 102:1139-1144, 2005). However, possible correlations between sites of viral-DNA integration and clonal expansion could not be explored because the woodchuck genome has not yet been sequenced. In order to further investigate this issue, we looked for similar clonal expansion of hepatocytes in the livers of chimpanzees chronically infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV). Liver samples for invPCR were collected from eight chimpanzees chronically infected with HBV for at least 20 years. Fifty clones ranging in size from ∼35 to 10,000 hepatocytes were detected using invPCR in 32 liver biopsy fragments (∼1 mg) containing, in total, ∼3 × 107 liver cells. Based on searching the analogous human genome, integration sites were found on all chromosomes except Y, ∼30% in known or predicted genes. However, no obvious association between the extent of clonal expansion and the integration site was apparent. This suggests that the integration site per se is not responsible for the outgrowth of large clones of hepatocytes.


Virology | 1988

Suramin inhibits in vitro infection by duck hepatitis B virus, Rous sarcoma virus, and hepatitis delta virus.

David J. Petcu; Carol E. Aldrich; Laura Coates; John M. Taylor; William S. Mason

Suramin blocked in vitro infection by duck hepatitis B virus, a hepadnavirus, and Rous sarcoma virus, a retrovirus. Although suramin was able to inhibit the virus-encoded reverse transcriptase activities of these two viruses, this inhibition did not appear to account for the anti-viral effect of the drug. In particular, suramin was unable to block synthesis within cells of full-length viral DNAs when added subsequent to infection. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that suramin acted by blocking virus uptake or uncoating. As further support of this hypothesis, we found that suramin also blocked infection by hepatitis delta virus, an RNA virus that is not known to employ reverse transcriptase during the initiation of infection.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Identification and Characterization of Avihepadnaviruses Isolated from Exotic Anseriformes Maintained in Captivity

Haitao Guo; William S. Mason; Carol E. Aldrich; Jeffry Saputelli; Darren S. Miller; Allison R. Jilbert; John E. Newbold

ABSTRACT Five new hepadnaviruses were cloned from exotic ducks and geese, including the Chiloe wigeon, mandarin duck, puna teal, Orinoco sheldgoose, and ashy-headed sheldgoose. Sequence comparisons revealed that all but the mandarin duck viruses were closely related to existing isolates of duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV), while mandarin duck virus clones were closely related to Ross goose hepatitis B virus. Nonetheless, the S protein, core protein, and functional domains of the Pol protein were highly conserved in all of the new isolates. The Chiloe wigeon and puna teal hepatitis B viruses, the two new isolates most closely related to DHBV, also lacked an AUG start codon at the beginning of their X open reading frame (ORF). But as previously reported for the heron, Ross goose, and stork hepatitis B viruses, an AUG codon was found near the beginning of the X ORF of the mandarin duck, Orinoco, and ashy-headed sheldgoose viruses. In all of the new isolates, the X ORF ended with a stop codon at the same position. All of the cloned viruses replicated when transfected into the LMH line of chicken hepatoma cells. Significant differences between the new isolates and between these and previously reported isolates were detected in the pre-S domain of the viral envelope protein, which is believed to determine viral host range. Despite this, all of the new isolates were infectious for primary cultures of Pekin duck hepatocytes, and infectivity in young Pekin ducks was demonstrated for all but the ashy-headed sheldgoose isolate.


Virology | 1989

In Vitro infection of woodchuck hepatocytes with woodchuck hepatitis virus and ground squirrel hepatitis virus

Carol E. Aldrich; Laura Coates; Tsung Teh Wu; John E. Newbold; Bud C. Tennant; Jesse Summers; Christoph Seeger; William S. Mason

Primary cultures of woodchuck hepatocytes were demonstrated to be susceptible to in vitro infection by both woodchuck hepatitis virus and ground squirrel hepatitis virus, as evidenced by the appearance of DNA species characteristic of hepadnavirus replication. Initiation of infection by woodchuck hepatitis virus was blocked by the presence of suramin, polybrene, or dideoxycytidine. Viral CCC DNA, the putative template for viral RNA transcription, was detected at 2 days postinfection. Accumulation of intracellular intermediates in virion DNA synthesis was negligible until 7-10 days postinfection, but these DNA intermediates then increased dramatically in amount over the next few weeks. Results were obtained which suggested that the prolonged accumulation of intermediates in virion DNA synthesis was an intrinsic property of the infection of individual cells, and not the result of a slow spread of virus through the cultures.

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John M. Cullen

North Carolina State University

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Jesse Summers

University of New Mexico

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Laura Coates

Fox Chase Cancer Center

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Tsung Teh Wu

University of Pennsylvania

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