학술논문

Hepatitis C Virus and the Host: A Mutual Endurance Leaving Indelible Scars in the Host’s Immunity
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
International Journal of Molecular Sciences. December 2023, Vol. 25 Issue 1
Subject
Health aspects
Epigenetic inheritance -- Health aspects
Vaccines -- Health aspects
Liver cancer -- Health aspects
Biological response modifiers -- Health aspects
B cells -- Health aspects
Hepatitis C virus -- Health aspects
Infection -- Health aspects
Interferon -- Health aspects
Antibodies -- Health aspects
Liver -- Health aspects
Immune response -- Health aspects
T cells -- Health aspects
Viral antibodies -- Health aspects
Language
English
ISSN
1422-0067
Abstract
Author(s): Mario U. Mondelli (corresponding author) [1,2,*]; Sabrina Ottolini [3]; Barbara Oliviero [1]; Stefania Mantovani [1]; Antonella Cerino [1]; Dalila Mele [1,†]; Stefania Varchetta [1] 1. Introduction Hepatitis C virus [...]
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) has spread worldwide, and it is responsible for potentially severe chronic liver disease and primary liver cancer. Chronic infection remains for life if not spontaneously eliminated and viral persistence profoundly impairs the efficiency of the host’s immunity. Attempts have been made to develop an effective vaccine, but efficacy trials have met with failure. The availability of highly efficacious direct-acting antivirals (DAA) has created hope for the progressive elimination of chronic HCV infections; however, this approach requires a monumental global effort. HCV elicits a prompt innate immune response in the host, characterized by a robust production of interferon-α (IFN-α), although interference in IFN-α signaling by HCV proteins may curb this effect. The late appearance of largely ineffective neutralizing antibodies and the progressive exhaustion of T cells, particularly CD8 T cells, result in the inability to eradicate the virus in most infected patients. Moreover, an HCV cure resulting from DAA treatment does not completely restore the normal immunologic homeostasis. Here, we discuss the main immunological features of immune responses to HCV and the epigenetic scars that chronic viral persistence leaves behind.