Huh7
This article may be too technical for most readers to understand.(August 2016) |
Huh7 is an immortalised cell line and may be grown in the laboratory for research purposes. According to the web site huh7.com, it is "a well differentiated hepatocyte-derived carcinoma cell line, originally taken from a liver tumor in a 57-year-old Japanese male in 1982."[1] It is used extensively in hepatitis C and dengue virus research.[2][3]
Huh7 cells have been instrumental in hepatitis C research. Until 2005, it was not possible to culture hepatitis C in the laboratory. The introduction of the Huh7 cell line permitted screening of drug candidates against laboratory-cultured hepatitis C virus and permitted the development of new drugs against hepatitis C.[4][2][5]
In February 2022 it was reported that the Huh7 cells can reverse transcribe at least parts of the code of the mRNA from the BNT162b2 vaccine into DNA (the study doesn't prove that that DNA is integrated).[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "HuH-7 Cell Line". Retrieved 2016-07-05.
- ^ a b Sainz, Bruno; Tencate, Veronica; Uprichard, Susan L (2009). "Three-dimensional Huh7 cell culture system for the study of Hepatitis C virus infection". Virology Journal. 6: 103. doi:10.1186/1743-422X-6-103. PMC 2719612. PMID 19604376.
- ^ Behnam, Mira A. M.; Nitsche, Christoph; Boldescu, Veaceslav; Klein, Christian D. (2016). "The medicinal chemistry of dengue virus". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 59 (12): 5622–5649. doi:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b01653. PMID 26771861.
- ^ Bartenschlager, R; Pietschmann, T (2005). "Efficient hepatitis C virus cell culture system: what a difference the host cell makes". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 102 (28): 9739–40. Bibcode:2005PNAS..102.9739B. doi:10.1073/pnas.0504296102. PMC 1175013. PMID 15998731.
- ^ Meier, Volker; Ramadori, Giuliano (2009). "Hepatitis C virus virology and new treatment targets". Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy. 7 (3): 329–50. doi:10.1586/eri.09.12. PMID 19344246. S2CID 38411966.
- ^ Aldén, Markus; Olofsson Falla, Francisko; Yang, Daowei; Barghouth, Mohammad; Luan, Cheng; Rasmussen, Magnus; De Marinis, Yang (25 February 2022). "Intracellular Reverse Transcription of Pfizer BioNTech COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine BNT162b2 In Vitro in Human Liver Cell Line". Current Issues in Molecular Biology. 44 (3): 1115–1126. doi:10.3390/cimb44030073. PMC 8946961. PMID 35723296.