Islamabad, Jan 29 : A molecule embedded in the membrane of human liver cells that aids 
in cholesterol absorption also allows the entry of hepatitis C virus, the first 
step in hepatitis C infection, according to research at the University of 
Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine.
The cholesterol receptor offers 
a promising new target for anti-viral therapy, for which an approved drug may 
already exist, say the researchers, whose findings were reported online in 
advance of publication in Nature Medicine.
An estimated 4.1 million 
Americans are infected with hepatitis C virus, or HCV, which attacks the liver 
and leads to inflammation, according to the National Institutes of Health. Most 
people have no symptoms initially and may not know they have the infection until 
liver damage shows up decades later during routine medical 
tests.
Previous studies showed that cholesterol was somehow involved in 
HCV infection. The UIC researchers suspected that a receptor called NPC1L1, 
known to help maintain cholesterol balance might also be transporting the virus 
into the cell.
The receptor is common in the gut of many species -- but 
is found on liver cells only in humans and chimpanzees, says Susan Uprichard, 
assistant professor in medicine and microbiology and immunology and principal 
investigator in the study. These primates, she said, are the only animals that 
can be infected by HCV.
Uprichard and her coworkers showed that knocking 
down or blocking access to the NPC1L1 receptor prevented the virus from entering 
and infecting cells.
Bruno Sainz, Jr., UIC postdoctoral research 
associate in medicine and first author of the paper, said because the receptor 
is involved in cholesterol metabolism it was already well-studied. A drug that 
"specifically and uniquely targets NPC1L1" already exists and is approved for 
use to lower cholesterol levels, he said.
The FDA-approved drug ezetimibe 
(sold under the trade-name Zetia) is readily available and perfectly targeted to 
the receptor, Sainz said, so the researchers had an ideal method for testing 
NPC1L1's involvement in HCV infection.
They used the drug to block the 
receptor before, during and after inoculation with the virus, in cell culture 
and in a small-animal model, to evaluate the receptor's role in infection and 
the drug's potential as an anti-hepatitis agent.
The researchers showed 
that ezetimibe inhibited HCV infection in cell culture and in mice transplanted 
with human liver cells. And, unlike any currently available drugs, ezetimibe was 
able to inhibit infection by all six types of HCV.
The study, Uprichard 
said, opens up a number of possibilities for therapeutics.
Hepatitis C is 
the leading cause for liver transplantation in the U.S., but infected patients 
have problems after transplant because the virus attacks the new liver, 
Uprichard said.
While current drugs are highly toxic and often cannot be 
tolerated by transplant patients taking immunosuppressant drugs, ezetimibe is 
quite safe and has been used long-term without harm by people to control their 
cholesterol, Uprichard said. Because it prevents entry of the virus into cells, 
ezetimibe may help protect the new liver from infection.
For patients 
with chronic hepatitis C, ezetimibe may be able to be used in combination with 
current drugs.
"We forsee future HCV therapy as a drug-cocktail approach, 
like that used against AIDS," Uprichard said. "Based on cell culture and mouse 
model data, we expect ezetimibe, an entry inhibitor, may have tremendous synergy 
with current anti-HCV drugs resulting in an improvement in the effectiveness of 
treatment."
The study was supported by NIH Public Health Service grants, 
the American Cancer Society Research Scholar grant, the UIC Center for Clinical 
and Translational Science NIH grant, the UIC Council to Support Gastrointestinal 
and Liver Disease, and a grant from the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of 
Japan.
Ends
SA/EN
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Entry point for Hepatitis C infection identified
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