Retroviral infection and expression of cationic amino acid transporters in rodent hepatocytes.

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RESUMO

The susceptibility of rodent hepatocytes to infection by mouse type C retroviruses was examined in vivo and in vitro and compared with the expression of two membrane proteins that function as transporters for the cationic amino acids CAT-1 and CAT-2. CAT-1 expression in rodents determines susceptibility to ecotropic retrovirus infection by serving as the virus receptor. Recently, it has been suggested that CAT-2 may be a receptor for amphotropic murine leukemia virus. In the present study, CAT-1 expression was observed in Hepa1, a cell line derived from a murine hepatoma, and in rat hepatocytes propagated on collagen monolayers in vitro but not in intact or regenerating rat liver in vivo. The expression of CAT-1 correlated with susceptibility to infection by an ecotropic retrovirus encoding beta-galactosidase. CAT-2 expression was observed in hepatocytes in vitro and in vivo, consistent with reports of infection of regenerating and cultured hepatocytes by amphotropic retroviruses. However, introduction of murine CAT-2 into nonpermissive Chinese hamster cells was not sufficient to confer susceptibility to amphotropic retrovirus infection, using a protocol that could easily demonstrate CAT-1-dependent infection by an ecotropic virus. Our data establish CAT-1 as a major determinant of ecotropic retrovirus infection in rodent hepatocytes and suggest that CAT-2 is not a receptor for viruses in the amphotropic subgroup.

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