%0 Journal Article %A Yamada, Kentaro %A Takahashi, Masaharu %A Hoshino, Yu %A Takahashi, Hideyuki %A Ichiyama, Koji %A Nagashima, Shigeo %A Tanaka, Toshinori %A Okamoto, Hiroaki %T ORF3 protein of hepatitis E virus is essential for virion release from infected cells %D 2009 %J Journal of General Virology, %V 90 %N 8 %P 1880-1891 %@ 1465-2099 %R https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.010561-0 %I Microbiology Society, %X The function of the hepatitis E virus (HEV) open reading frame 3 (ORF3) protein remains unclear. To elucidate the role of the ORF3 protein in the virus life cycle, an infectious cDNA clone (pJE03-1760F/wt) that can replicate efficiently in PLC/PRF/5 and A549 cells and release progeny into the culture medium was used to generate a derivative ORF3-deficient (ΔORF3) mutant whose third in-frame AUG codon of ORF3 was mutated to GCA. The ΔORF3 mutant in the culture medium of mutant RNA-transfected PLC/PRF/5 cells was able to infect and replicate within PLC/PRF/5 and A549 cells as efficiently as the wild-type pJE03-1760F/wt virus. However, less than 1/100 of the number of progeny was detectable in the culture medium of ΔORF3 mutant-infected PLC/PRF/5 cells compared with wild-type-infected PLC/PRF/5 cells, and the HEV RNA level in the culture medium of ΔORF3 mutant-infected A549 cells was below or near the limit of detection. An immunocapture PCR assay revealed that the ORF3 protein is present on the surface of cell-culture-generated wild-type HEV but not on the ΔORF3 mutant. Wild-type HEV in the culture supernatant peaked at a sucrose density of 1.15–1.16 g ml−1, in contrast with the ΔORF3 mutant in culture supernatant, which banded at 1.27–1.28 g ml−1, similar to HEV in cell lysate and faecal HEV. These results suggest that the ORF3 protein is responsible for virion egress from infected cells and is present on the surface of released HEV particles, which may be associated with lipids. %U https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/jgv/10.1099/vir.0.010561-0