Pc. Wang et al., Analysis of integrated hepatitis B virus DNA and flanking cellular sequence by inverse polymerase chain reaction, J VIROL MET, 92(1), 2001, pp. 83-90
Although hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA has been detected in the human hepatom
a cell line, HAGS 2.1, viral and cellular junction sequences have not been
investigated fully. To facilitate the analysis of HBV DNA integration sites
in HAGS 2.1 cells, a combination of conventional polymerase chain reaction
(PCR) and inverse PCR (IPCR) was carried out to identify the junction betw
een the viral and the cellular gene. The HBV integrant and its cellular cou
nterpart sequence were cloned and analyzed. The sequencing data indicated t
hat the breakpoints on the HBV integrant are at nucleotide 2111 of the C ge
ne and nucleotide 1558 of the X gene. The length of the integrated HBV DNA
in HAGS 2.1 was approximately 2.6 kb, which includes partial C, P, and X ge
nes and an intact S gene. The cellular sequence flanking the integrated HBV
gene was very similar to a human satellite III repetitive sequence with 43
and 56 of GGAAT repeats on the left- and right-hand side, respectively. Al
though the findings on the viral-cellular junction in HAGS 2.1 cells cannot
explain the liver tumorigenesis, the current study shows that by choosing
the nearest restriction site, which can be determined by conventional PCR r
ather than using a unique site within the integrated viral sequence to do I
PCR, gives a higher successful rate for cloning and the subsequent analysis
of the viral-cellular junctions. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. Al rights
reserved.