Research Article

Expression of hepatitis B virus core antigen gene is induced in human hepatoma cells by their growth in nude mice -- Marquardt et al. 65 (8): 1443 -- Journal of General Virology

Journal of General Virology 65(8):1443

Abstract

The human hepatoma cell line PLC/PRF/5 is persistently infected with hepatitis B virus. Cells cultured in vitro are known to produce the virus surface antigen but not be other structural virus proteins, the core and the e antigen. It is shown here that expression of the core antigen gene was inducible by growing the cells as a nude mouse tumour. The buoyant density in CsCl (1.31 to 1.32 g/ml) of core or e antigen produced in the tumours was very similar to that of virus core particles. Expression of the core antigen gene was shunt off by culture in vitro of core or e antigen-producing nude mouse tumour cells and induced again by subsequent passage of cells in the nude mouse. The experimental system thus allows studies on the regulation of expression of the core antigen gene.