Host Cell Metabolism Goes Viral: Unveiling How HEV Hijacks Your Cells

Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a major cause of acute and chronic hepatitis, with severity depending on the viral genotype. HEV-1 infection can be particularly severe during pregnancy, whereas HEV-3 is typically mild, except in elderly or immunocompromised individuals.
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Mitochondrial and lipid metabolism rewiring during HEV infection - Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences

Hepatitis E virus (HEV), a leading cause of acute and chronic viral hepatitis, poses a persistent global health challenge. A deeper mechanistic understanding of virus–host interactions is critical for identifying therapeutic targets to mitigate HEV-associated disease. In this study, we employ a systems biology framework to comprehensively map metabolic and bioenergetic alterations induced by HEV genotypes 1 and 3 in HepG2/C3a-MAVS-KD cells, a robust model of HEV infection, enabling reliable assessment of virus- and host-driven cellular changes. Our analyses reveal extensive remodelling of host metabolism, including reprogramming of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), fatty acid metabolism, and β-oxidation—pathways that collectively sustain the energetic and biosynthetic demands of viral infection. HEV infection also reshapes the cellular lipidome, increasing levels of long-chain neutral lipids and lipid droplet abundance, alongside elevated levels of pro-inflammatory oxylipins. Functional metabolic assays demonstrate a reliance on lipid-fuelled OXPHOS rather than glycolysis for efficient HEV infection. These findings uncover critical host metabolic dependencies exploited by HEV and offer a conceptual framework for targeting metabolic hubs as a therapeutic strategy against HEV infection. Author Summary: Viruses are obligate intracellular pathogens that reprogramme host cellular machinery to their advantage. Yet, the extent to which Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection orchestrates metabolic reprogramming, and the implications of these changes for viral fitness, remain poorly defined. By integrating large-scale proteomics with lipid metabolic profiling, we delineate molecular strategies through which HEV subverts host lipid metabolism and mitochondrial function. Our findings provide mechanistic insight into how HEV infection modulates host metabolic pathways to its advantage, highlighting potential targets for therapeutic intervention. Graphical Abstract

Our latest study (Glaziou et al., 2026, Mol Cell Life Sci) reveals that HEV hijacks host cell metabolism to fuel its replication:

  • TCA cycle, mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), fatty acid metabolism, and β-oxidation, are extensively rewired.
  • Lipid storage organelles expand, long-chain neutral lipids accumulate, and pro-inflammatory oxylipins surge.
  • HEV relies on lipid-fuelled OXPHOS rather than glycolysis.
  • Distinct metabolic programs for HEV-1 versus HEV-3, aligning with their differential pathogenicity.

These findings highlight critical host metabolic vulnerabilities exploited by HEV and provide a roadmap for targeting metabolic hubs as therapy.

Interestingly, while our previous work in placental models (Gouilly et al., 2018, Nat Commun) showed HEV-1 triggers inflammatory damage at the maternal-fetal interface, the placenta is a highly active metabolic organ, and how HEV reshapes its metabolism remains an exciting question for future studies. 

Takeaway: HEV doesn’t just infect—it reprograms, fuels, and manipulates host metabolism to thrive. Understanding these strategies could point to novel therapeutic interventions.

Key metabolic and signalling pathways remodelled in hepatocytes upon HEV infection.

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Virology
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Microbiology > Virology
Hepatitis
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Microbiology > Medical Microbiology > Infectious Diseases > Hepatitis
Metabolism
Physical Sciences > Chemistry > Biological Chemistry > Metabolism
Mitochondria
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Cell Biology > Organelles > Mitochondria