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Determinants of Viral Clearance and Persistence during Acute Hepatitis C Virus Infection

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TLDR
The virological and immunological features of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were studied weekly for 6 months after accidental needlestick exposure in five health care workers, four of whom developed acute hepatitis that progressed to chronicity while one subject cleared the virus.
Abstract
The virological and immunological features of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were studied weekly for 6 months after accidental needlestick exposure in five health care workers, four of whom developed acute hepatitis that progressed to chronicity while one subject cleared the virus. In all subjects, viremia was first detectable within 1–2 weeks of inoculation, 1 month or more before the appearance of virus-specific T cells. The subject who cleared the virus experienced a prolonged episode of acute hepatitis that coincided with a CD38+ IFN-γ− CD8+ T cell response to HCV and a small reduction in viremia. Subsequently, a strong CD4+ T cell response emerged and the CD8+ T cells became CD38− and started producing IFN-γ in response to HCV, coinciding with a rapid 100,000-fold decrease in viremia that occurred without a corresponding surge of disease activity. Chronic infection developed in two subjects who failed to produce a significant T cell response and in two other subjects who initially mounted strong CD4+ T cell responses that ultimately waned. In all subjects, viremia was higher at the peak of acute hepatitis than it was when the disease began, and the disease improved during the viremia. These results provide the first insight into the host–virus relationship in humans during the incubation phase of acute HCV infection, and they provide the only insight to date into the virological and immunological characteristics of clinically asymptomatic acute HCV infection, the commonest manifestation of this disease. In addition, the results suggest that the vigor and quality of the antiviral T cell response determines the outcome of acute HCV infection, that the ability of HCV to outpace the T cell response may contribute to its tendency to persist; that the onset of hepatitis coincides with the onset of the CD8+T cell response, that disease pathogenesis and viral clearance are mediated by different CD8+ T cell populations that control HCV by both cytolytic and noncytolytic mechanisms, and that there are different pathways to viral persistence in asymptomatic and symptomatic acute HCV infection.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Hepatitis C Virus Infection

TL;DR: The institution of blood-screening measures in developed countries has decreased the risk of transfusion-associated hepatitis to a negligible level, but new cases continue to occur mainly as a result of injection-drug use and, to a lesser degree, through other means of percutaneous or mucous-membrane exposure.
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Robust hepatitis C virus infection in vitro

TL;DR: A simple yet robust HCV cell culture infection system based on the HCV JFH-1 molecular clone and Huh-7-derived cell lines that allows the production of virus that can be efficiently propagated in tissue culture is reported.
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Immunology of hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus infection.

TL;DR: This review assesses recent advances in the understanding of viral hepatitis, contrasts mechanisms of virus–host interaction in acute hepatitis B and hepatitis C, and outlines areas for future studies.
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Course and outcome of hepatitis C.

TL;DR: The hepatitis C virus is a small enveloped RNA virus belonging to the family flaviviridae and genus hepacivirus that replicates at a high rate in the liver and has marked sequence heterogeneity.
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Genetic diversity and evolution of hepatitis C virus--15 years on.

TL;DR: Two contrasting aspects of conservatism and adaptability provide a fascinating paradigm in which to explore the complex selection pressures that underlie the evolution of HCV and other persistent viruses.
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TL;DR: DR "low-resolution" typing by the PCR-SSP technique is ideally suited for analyzing small numbers of samples simultaneously and is an alternative to serological DR typing in routine clinical practice including donor-recipient matching in cadaveric transplantations.
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TL;DR: A strong and persistent CTL response in resolving acute HCV infection is demonstrated, and rationale to explore immune augmentation as a therapeutic intervention in chronic HCv infection is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Viral Clearance Without Destruction of Infected Cells During Acute HBV Infection

TL;DR: Results demonstrate that noncytopathic antiviral mechanisms contribute to viral clearance during acute viral hepatitis by purging HBV replicative intermediates from the cytoplasm and covalently closed circular viral DNA from the nucleus of infected cells.
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Intracellular inactivation of the hepatitis B virus by cytotoxic T lymphocytes

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