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Recapitulation of treatment response patterns in a novel humanized mouse model for chronic hepatitis B virus infection.


ABSTRACT: There are ~350 million chronic carriers of hepatitis B (HBV). While a prophylactic vaccine and drug regimens to suppress viremia are available, chronic HBV infection is rarely cured. HBV's limited host tropism leads to a scarcity of susceptible small animal models and is a hurdle to developing curative therapies. Mice that support engraftment with human hepatoctyes have traditionally been generated through crosses of murine liver injury models to immunodeficient backgrounds. Here, we describe the disruption of fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase directly in the NOD Rag1-/- IL2R?NULL (NRG) background using zinc finger nucleases. The resultant human liver chimeric mice sustain persistent HBV viremia for >90 days. When treated with standard of care therapy, HBV DNA levels decrease below detection but rebound when drug suppression is released, mimicking treatment response observed in patients. Our study highlights the utility of directed gene targeting approaches in zygotes to create new humanized mouse models for human diseases.

SUBMITTER: Winer BY 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5414730 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Recapitulation of treatment response patterns in a novel humanized mouse model for chronic hepatitis B virus infection.

Winer Benjamin Y BY   Huang Tiffany T   Low Benjamin E BE   Avery Cindy C   Pais Mihai-Alexandru MA   Hrebikova Gabriela G   Siu Evelyn E   Chiriboga Luis L   Wiles Michael V MV   Ploss Alexander A  

Virology 20161219


There are ~350 million chronic carriers of hepatitis B (HBV). While a prophylactic vaccine and drug regimens to suppress viremia are available, chronic HBV infection is rarely cured. HBV's limited host tropism leads to a scarcity of susceptible small animal models and is a hurdle to developing curative therapies. Mice that support engraftment with human hepatoctyes have traditionally been generated through crosses of murine liver injury models to immunodeficient backgrounds. Here, we describe th  ...[more]

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