The Leeuwenhoek Lecture, 1985: A Molecular Biologist's View of Viral Hepatitis
Abstract
Three forms of viral hepatitis can be distinguished serologically. Hepatitis A virus is a picornavirus, which is being studied increasingly after its propagation in cell cultures. The B virus (HBV) is the prototype of a family now termed hepadna viruses and is by far the best understood. The third, by exclusion, is non-A non-B, about which little else is known. Molecular cloning methods enable copies of viral genes to be propagated and analysed quite readily and provide the means for isolation and expression of individual genes in microbial and animal cells. Determination of the nucleotide sequences of HBV DNA revealed its genetic organization and so guided studies of the mechanism of gene expression both in infected animals and cultures of transformed cells. Replication of the viral genome has also been studied in natural infections, particularly with duck HBV, but also with the human virus. Expression of HBV genes in microbial cells is valuable as a source of antigens for diagnostic reagents and vaccine preparations, but has also been of consequence for the identification of viral gene products not previously recognized and which are of considerable current interest. The methods and materials now available provide additional opportunities for inquiring into the course of viral infection, replication of the virus and, for HBV, the possible role in the development of hepatomas of integration of the viral genome into the host chromosome.
- Publication:
-
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B
- Pub Date:
- March 1987
- DOI:
- 10.1098/rspb.1987.0013
- Bibcode:
- 1987RSPSB.230..107M