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Dive into the research topics where Jane A. McKeating is active.

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Featured researches published by Jane A. McKeating.


Nature | 2007

Claudin-1 is a hepatitis C virus co-receptor required for a late step in entry

Matthew J. Evans; Thomas von Hahn; Donna M. Tscherne; Andrew J. Syder; Maryline Panis; Benno Wölk; Theodora Hatziioannou; Jane A. McKeating; Paul D. Bieniasz; Charles M. Rice

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a leading cause of cirrhosis and liver cancer worldwide. A better understanding of the viral life cycle, including the mechanisms of entry into host cells, is needed to identify novel therapeutic targets. Although HCV entry requires the CD81 co-receptor, and other host molecules have been implicated, at least one factor critical to this process remains unknown (reviewed in refs 1–3). Using an iterative expression cloning approach we identified claudin-1 (CLDN1), a tight junction component that is highly expressed in the liver, as essential for HCV entry. CLDN1 is required for HCV infection of human hepatoma cell lines and is the first factor to confer susceptibility to HCV when ectopically expressed in non-hepatic cells. Discrete residues within the first extracellular loop (EL1) of CLDN1, but not protein interaction motifs in intracellular domains, are critical for HCV entry. Moreover, antibodies directed against an epitope inserted in the CLDN1 EL1 block HCV infection. The kinetics of this inhibition indicate that CLDN1 acts late in the entry process, after virus binding and interaction with the HCV co-receptor CD81. With CLDN1 we have identified a novel key factor for HCV entry and a new target for antiviral drug development.


Journal of Virology | 2002

Highly Permissive Cell Lines for Subgenomic and Genomic Hepatitis C Virus RNA Replication

Keril J. Blight; Jane A. McKeating; Charles M. Rice

ABSTRACT Hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication appears to be restricted to the human hepatoma cell line Huh-7, indicating that a favorable cellular environment exists within these cells. Although adaptive mutations in the HCV nonstructural proteins typically enhance the replicative capacity of subgenomic replicons in Huh-7 cells, replication can only be detected in a subpopulation of these cells. Here we show that self-replicating subgenomic RNA could be eliminated from Huh-7 clones by prolonged treatment with alpha interferon (IFN-α) and that a higher frequency of cured cells could support both subgenomic and full-length HCV replication. The increased permissiveness of one of the cured cell lines allowed us to readily detect HCV RNA and antigens early after RNA transfection, eliminating the need for selection of replication-positive cells. We also demonstrate that a single amino acid substitution in NS5A is sufficient for establishing HCV replication in a majority of cured cells and that the major phosphate acceptor site of subtype 1b NS5A is not essential for HCV replication.


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

Hepatitis C virus glycoproteins mediate pH-dependent cell entry of pseudotyped retroviral particles

Mayla Hsu; Jie Zhang; Mike Flint; Carine Logvinoff; Cecilia Cheng-Mayer; Charles M. Rice; Jane A. McKeating

HIV pseudotypes bearing native hepatitis C virus (HCV) glycoproteins (strain H and Con1) are infectious for the human hepatoma cell lines Huh-7 and PLC/PR5. Infectivity depends on coexpression of both E1 and E2 glycoproteins, is pH-dependent, and can be neutralized by mAbs mapping to amino acids 412–447 within E2. Cell-surface expression of one or all of the candidate receptor molecules (CD81, low-density lipoprotein receptor, scavenger receptor class B type 1, and dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3 grabbing nonintegrin) failed to confer permissivity to HIV–HCV pseudotype infection. However, HIV–HCV pseudotype infectivity was inhibited by a recombinant soluble form of CD81 and a mAb specific for CD81, suggesting that CD81 may be a component of a receptor complex.


Nature Medicine | 2011

EGFR and EphA2 are host factors for hepatitis C virus entry and possible targets for antiviral therapy

Joachim Lupberger; Mirjam B. Zeisel; Fei Xiao; Christine Thumann; Isabel Fofana; Laetitia Zona; Christopher Davis; Christopher J. Mee; Marine Turek; Sebastian Gorke; Cathy Royer; Benoit Fischer; Muhammad Zahid; Dimitri Lavillette; Judith Fresquet; François-Loïc Cosset; S Michael Rothenberg; Thomas Pietschmann; Arvind H. Patel; Patrick Pessaux; Michel Doffoel; Wolfgang Raffelsberger; Olivier Poch; Jane A. McKeating; Laurent Brino; Thomas F. Baumert

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of liver disease, but therapeutic options are limited and there are no prevention strategies. Viral entry is the first step of infection and requires the cooperative interaction of several host cell factors. Using a functional RNAi kinase screen, we identified epidermal growth factor receptor and ephrin receptor A2 as host cofactors for HCV entry. Blocking receptor kinase activity by approved inhibitors broadly impaired infection by all major HCV genotypes and viral escape variants in cell culture and in a human liver chimeric mouse model in vivo. The identified receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) mediate HCV entry by regulating CD81–claudin-1 co-receptor associations and viral glycoprotein–dependent membrane fusion. These results identify RTKs as previously unknown HCV entry cofactors and show that tyrosine kinase inhibitors have substantial antiviral activity. Inhibition of RTK function may constitute a new approach for prevention and treatment of HCV infection.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Efficient Replication of Hepatitis C Virus Genotype 1a RNAs in Cell Culture

Keril J. Blight; Jane A. McKeating; Joseph Marcotrigiano; Charles M. Rice

ABSTRACT Hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1 (subtypes 1a and 1b) is responsible for the majority of treatment-resistant liver disease worldwide. Thus far, efficient HCV RNA replication has been observed only for subgenomic and full-length RNAs derived from genotype 1b isolates. Here, we report the establishment of efficient RNA replication systems for genotype 1a strain H77. Replication of subgenomic and full-length H77 1a RNAs required the highly permissive Huh-7.5 hepatoma subline and adaptive amino acid substitutions in both NS3 and NS5A. Replication could be detected by RNA quantification, fluorescence-activated cell sorting, and metabolic labeling of HCV-specific proteins. Replication efficiencies were similar for subgenomic and full-length RNAs and were most efficient for HCV RNAs lacking heterologous RNA elements. Interestingly, both subtype 1a and 1b NS3 adaptive mutations are surface exposed and present on only one face of the NS3 structure. The cell culture-adapted subtype 1a replicons should be useful for basic replication studies and for antiviral development. These results are also encouraging for the development of adapted replicons for the remaining HCV genotypes.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Hepatitis C Virus Glycoproteins Interact with DC-SIGN and DC-SIGNR

Stefan Pöhlmann; Jie Zhang; Frédéric Baribaud; Zhiwei Chen; George J. Leslie; George Lin; Angela Granelli-Piperno; Robert W. Doms; Charles M. Rice; Jane A. McKeating

ABSTRACT DC-SIGN and DC-SIGNR are two closely related membrane-associated C-type lectins that bind human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) envelope glycoprotein with high affinity. Binding of HIV to cells expressing DC-SIGN or DC-SIGNR can enhance the efficiency of infection of cells coexpressing the specific HIV receptors. DC-SIGN is expressed on some dendritic cells, while DC-SIGNR is localized to certain endothelial cell populations, including hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells. We found that soluble versions of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) E2 glycoprotein and retrovirus pseudotypes expressing chimeric forms of both HCV E1 and E2 glycoproteins bound efficiently to DC-SIGN and DC-SIGNR expressed on cell lines and primary human endothelial cells but not to other C-type lectins tested. Soluble E2 bound to immature and mature human monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MDDCs). Binding of E2 to immature MDDCs was dependent on DC-SIGN interactions, while binding to mature MDDCs was partly independent of DC-SIGN, suggesting that other cell surface molecules may mediate HCV glycoprotein interactions. HCV interactions with DC-SIGN and DC-SIGNR may contribute to the establishment or persistence of infection both by the capture and delivery of virus to the liver and by modulating dendritic cell function.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Time- and Temperature-Dependent Activation of Hepatitis C Virus for Low-pH-Triggered Entry

Donna M. Tscherne; Christopher T. Jones; Matthew J. Evans; Brett D. Lindenbach; Jane A. McKeating; Charles M. Rice

ABSTRACT Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an important human pathogen associated with chronic liver disease. Recently, based on a genotype 2a isolate, tissue culture systems supporting complete replication and infectious virus production have been developed. In this study, we used cell culture-produced infectious HCV to analyze the viral entry pathway into Huh-7.5 cells. Bafilomycin A1 and concanamycin A, inhibitors of vacuolar ATPases, prevented HCV entry when they were present prior to infection and had minimal effect on downstream replication events. HCV entry therefore appears to be pH dependent, requiring an acidified intracellular compartment. For many other enveloped viruses, acidic pH triggers an irreversible conformational change, which promotes virion-endosomal membrane fusion. Such viruses are often inactivated by low pH. In the case of HCV, exposure of virions to acidic pH followed by return to neutral pH did not affect their infectivity. This parallels the observation made for the related pestivirus bovine viral diarrhea virus. Low pH could activate the entry of cell surface-bound HCV but only after prolonged incubation at 37°C. This suggests that there are rate-limiting, postbinding events that are needed to render HCV competent for low-pH-triggered entry. Such events may involve interaction with a cellular coreceptor or other factors but do not require cathepsins B and L, late endosomal proteases that activate Ebola virus and reovirus for entry.


Journal of Virology | 2004

CD81 Is Required for Hepatitis C Virus Glycoprotein-Mediated Viral Infection

Jie Zhang; Glenn Randall; Adrian Higginbottom; Peter N. Monk; Charles M. Rice; Jane A. McKeating

ABSTRACT CD81 has been described as a putative receptor for hepatitis C virus (HCV); however, its role in HCV cell entry has not been characterized due to the lack of an efficient cell culture system. We have examined the role of CD81 in HCV glycoprotein-dependent entry by using a recently developed retroviral pseudotyping system. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) pseudotypes bearing HCV E1E2 glycoproteins show a restricted tropism for human liver cell lines. Although all of the permissive cell lines express CD81, CD81 expression alone is not sufficient to allow viral entry. CD81 is required for HIV-HCV pseudotype infection since (i) a monoclonal antibody specific for CD81 inhibited infection of susceptible target cells and (ii) silencing of CD81 expression in Huh-7.5 hepatoma cells by small interfering RNAs inhibited HIV-HCV pseudotype infection. Furthermore, expression of CD81 in human liver cells that were previously resistant to infection, HepG2 and HH29, conferred permissivity of HCV pseudotype infection. The characterization of chimeric CD9/CD81 molecules confirmed that the large extracellular loop of CD81 is a determinant for viral entry. These data suggest a functional role for CD81 as a coreceptor for HCV glycoprotein-dependent viral cell entry.


Hepatology | 2007

Hepatitis C virus cell‐cell transmission in hepatoma cells in the presence of neutralizing antibodies

Jennifer M. Timpe; Zania Stamataki; Adam Jennings; Ke Hu; Michelle J. Farquhar; Helen J. Harris; Anne Schwarz; Isabelle Desombere; Geert Leroux Roels; Peter Balfe; Jane A. McKeating

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection of Huh‐7.5 hepatoma cells results in focal areas of infection where transmission is potentiated by cell‐cell contact. To define route(s) of transmission, HCV was allowed to infect hepatoma cells in the presence or absence of antibodies that neutralize cell‐free virus infectivity. Neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) reduced cell‐free virus infectivity by >95% and had minimal effect(s) on the frequency of infected cells in the culture. To assess whether cell‐cell transfer of viral infectivity occurs, HCV‐infected cells were cocultured with fluorescently labeled naïve cells in the presence or absence of nAbs. Enumeration by flow cytometry demonstrated cell‐cell transfer of infectivity in the presence or absence of nAbs and immunoglobulins from HCV+ patients. The host cell molecule CD81 and the tight junction protein Claudin 1 (CLDN1) are critical factors defining HCV entry. Soluble CD81 and anti‐CD81 abrogated cell‐free infection of Huh‐7.5 and partially inhibited cell‐cell transfer of infection. CD81‐negative HepG2 hepatoma cells were resistant to cell‐free virus infection but became infected after coculturing with JFH‐infected cells in the presence of nAb, confirming that CD81‐independent routes of cell‐cell transmission exist. Further experiments with 293T and 293T‐CLDN1 targets suggested that cell‐cell transmission is dependent on CLDN1 expression. Conclusion: These data suggest that HCV can transmit in vitro by at least two routes, cell‐free virus infection and direct transfer between cells, with the latter offering a novel route for evading nAbs. (HEPATOLOGY 2007.)


Journal of Virology | 2007

Initiation of Hepatitis C Virus Infection Is Dependent on Cholesterol and Cooperativity between CD81 and Scavenger Receptor B Type I

Sharookh B. Kapadia; Heidi Barth; Thomas Baumert; Jane A. McKeating; Francis V. Chisari

ABSTRACT In the past several years, a number of cellular proteins have been identified as candidate entry receptors for hepatitis C virus (HCV) by using surrogate models of HCV infection. Among these, the tetraspanin CD81 and scavenger receptor B type I (SR-BI), both of which localize to specialized plasma membrane domains enriched in cholesterol, have been suggested to be key players in HCV entry. In the current study, we used a recently developed in vitro HCV infection system to demonstrate that both CD81 and SR-BI are required for authentic HCV infection in vitro, that they function cooperatively to initiate HCV infection, and that CD81-mediated HCV entry is, in part, dependent on membrane cholesterol.

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Peter Balfe

University of Birmingham

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Ke Hu

University of Birmingham

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Robin A. Weiss

Institute of Cancer Research

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