Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/7558
Title: Genotype-specific genomic markers associated with primary hepatomas, based on complete genomic sequencing of hepatitis B virus
Authors: Sung, Joseph J. Y. 
Tsui, Stephen K. W. 
Tse, Chi-Hang 
Ng, Eddie Y. T. 
Prof. LEUNG Kwong Sak 
Lee, Kin-Hong 
Mok, Tony S. K 
Bartholomeusz, Angeline 
Au, Thomas C. C. 
Tsoi, Kelvin K. F. 
Locarnini, Stephen 
Chan, Henry L. Y. 
Issue Date: 2008
Source: Journal of Virology, 2008, Vol. 82 (7), pp. 3604 - 3611
Journal: Journal of Virology 
Abstract: We aimed to identify genomic markers in hepatitis B virus (HBV) that are associated with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development by comparing the complete genomic sequences of HBVs among patients with HCC and those without. One hundred patients with HBV-related HCC and 100 age-matched HBV-infected non-HCC patients (controls) were studied. HBV DNA from serum was directly sequenced to study the whole viral genome. Data mining and rule learning were employed to develop diagnostic algorithms. An independent cohort of 132 cases (43 HCC and 89 non-HCC) was used to validate the accuracy of these algorithms. Among the 100 cases of HCC, 37 had genotype B (all subgenotype Ba) and 63 had genotype C (16 subgenotype Ce and 47 subgenotype Cs) HBV infection. In the control group, 51 had genotype B and 49 had genotype C (10 subgenotype Ce and 39 subgenotype Cs) HBV infection. Genomic algorithms associated with HCC were derived based on genotype/subgenotype-specific mutations. In genotype B HBV, mutations C1165T, A1762T and G1764A, T2712C/A/G, and A/T2525C were associated with HCC. HCC-related mutations T31C, T53C, and A1499G were associated with HBV subgenotype Ce, and mutations G1613A, G1899A, T2170C/G, and T2441C were associated with HBV subgenotype Cs. Amino acid changes caused by these mutations were found in the X, envelope, and precore/core regions in association with HBV genotype B, Ce, and Cs, respectively. In conclusion, infections with different genotypes of HBV (B, Ce, and Cs) carry different genomic markers for HCC at different parts of the HBV genome. Different HBV genotypes may have different virologic mechanisms of hepatocarcinogenesis. Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Type: Peer Reviewed Journal Article
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/7558
ISSN: 0022538X
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01197-07
Appears in Collections:Applied Data Science - Publication

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