Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections are a significant
cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Interferon-α2b
treatment, alone or in combination with ribavirin, eliminates
HCV from some patients, but patients infected with HCV genotype
1 viruses are cured less frequently than patients infected with
HCV genotype 2 or 3 viruses. We report that HCV mRNA was detected
and destroyed by the interferon-regulated antiviral
2′-5′ oligoadenylate synthetase/ribonuclease L pathway
present in cytoplasmic extracts of HeLa cells. Ribonuclease
L cleaved HCV mRNA into fragments 200 to 500 bases in length.
Ribonuclease L cleaved HCV mRNA predominately at UA and UU
dinucleotides within loops of predicted stem-loop structures.
HCV mRNAs from relatively interferon-resistant genotypes (HCV
genotypes 1a and 1b) have fewer UA and UU dinucleotides than
HCV mRNAs from more interferon-sensitive genotypes (HCV genotypes
2a, 2b, 3a, and 3b). HCV 2a mRNA, with 73 more UA and UU
dinucleotides than HCV 1a mRNA, was cleaved by RNase L more
readily than HCV 1a mRNA. In patients, HCV 1b mRNAs accumulated
silent mutations preferentially at UA and UU dinucleotides during
interferon therapy. These results suggest that the sensitivity
of HCV infections to interferon therapy may correlate with the
efficiency by which RNase L cleaves HCV mRNA.