Oncogenic Virus
Oncogenic Virus
Oncogenic Virus
CANCER
Oncogenic virus
Distinguishing
Characteristics of Viruses
Obligate
intracellular
parasites
Contain DNA or
RNA
Replication
involves
disassembly and
reassembly
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Routes of entry:
Inhalation
ingestion
inoculation
sexual
Blood
organ t/plant
Congenital / vertical
WHO Estimates
Worldwide, the WHO International
Agency for Research on Cancer
estimated that in 2002, 20% of
human cancers were caused by
infection, of which 1015% are
caused by one of seven different
viruses. The importance of this is that
some of these cancers might be
easily prevented through vaccination
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What is Cancer
Cancer results from alterations in
critical regulatory genes that control
cell proliferation, differentiation, and
survival. Studies of tumor viruses
revealed that specific genes (called
oncogenes) are capable of inducing
cell transformation, thereby providing
the first insights into the molecular
basis of cancer.
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Early History
The theory that cancer could be caused
by a virus began with the experiments
of Oluf Bang and Vilhelm Ellerman in
1908 who first show that avian
erythroblastosis (a form of chicken
leukemia) could be transmitted by cellfree extracts. This was subsequently
confirmed for solid tumors in chickens in
1910-1911 by Peyton Rous.
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Research History
In 1908, Ellerman
& Bang first
discovered virus,
producing leukemia
in chicken.
In 1911 Peyton
Rous 1st shows the
presence of
filterable sarcoma
material that induce
the CANCER.
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Relationship of
viruses with
malignancy
Ellerman & Bang (1908)
leukemia in fowls
Rous (1911) fowl sarcoma
Shope isolated Rabbit fibroma virus
(1932), papilloma virus (1933)
Bittner (1936) Breast Ca in mice
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Oncovirus
An oncovirus is a virus that can
cause cancer. This term originated
from studies of acutely-transforming
retroviruses in the 195060s, often
called oncornaviruses to denote their
RNA virus origin. It now refers to any
virus with a DNA or RNA genome
causing cancer and is synonymous
with "tumor virus" or "cancer virus".
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by transforming cells
cancer
When a virus infects a cell, it
expresses proteins that cause the
cell to proliferate and/or block
apoptosis
Cancer is multi-factorial: Oncogenic
viruses are very common, only a small
% of people infected actually get
cancer
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Classification
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Major human
Oncogenic Viruses
DNA Viruses
Small DNA tumor viruses
- Adenovirus
- SV40
- Human Papilloma virus (HPV)
Herpesviruses (large)
- Epstein Barr virus (EBV)
- Kaposis Sarcoma Herpesvirus
(KSHV)
Other
- Hepatitis virus B
RNA viruses
Human T-cell Leukemia Virus 1 (HTLV1)
Hepatitis virus C
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NEOPLASMS
DNA VIRUSES
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RNA viruses
Some RNA
viruses have also
been associated
such as the
hepatitis virus
as well as human
T-lymphotropic
virus (HTLV-1).
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Oncogenic viruses
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Oncogenic
Retroviruses
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Retroviruses:
1.Avian leukosis
viruses
2.Murine leukosis
viruses
3.Murine
mammary tumor
virus
4.Leukosissarcoma viruses
5.Human T cell
leukemia virus
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Retroviridae
Any virus capable of
inducing tumors. The
RNA tumor viruses
(family Retroviridae),
which are well
defined and rather
homogeneous, or the
DNA viruses, which
contain a number of
viruses capable of
inducing
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Cancer
Cancer arises from
a combination of
dominant gain of
function mutations
in proto- oncogenes
and recessive loss
of function
mutations in tumor
suppressor genes
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Understanding Cancer
CANCER
Cancer is an overgrowth of cells bearing cumulative
genetic injuries that confer growth advantage over the
normal cells [Nowells Law]
Cancer cells can be characterized as antisocial,
fairly autonomous units that appear to be indifferent
to the constraints and regulatory signals imposed on
normal cells [Robbins]
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NORMAL CELLS
Frequent
mitoses
Normal
cell
Nucleus
Few
mitoses
Blood vessel
Abnormal
heterogeneous cells
Intermittent or co-ordinated
growth factor secretion
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CHARACTERISTICS OF
CANCER
Clonality
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Cancer Genetics
Tumors arise as clones from a
single cell. At the cellular level,
cancer is a genetic disease.
The development of the malignant
clone is due to mutations in DNA
due to:
Random replication errors
Exposure to carcinogens
Faulty DNA repair process
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Cancer Genes
Proto-oncogenes normally promote
normal cell growth; mutations convert
them to oncogenes.
Tumor suppressor genes normally
restrain cell growth; loss of function results
in unregulated growth.
Mutator or DNA repair genes when
faulty, result in an accumulated rate of
mutations.
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ONCOGENE FAMILY
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Viral
Carcinogenesis
Viral carcinogens are classified
into RNA and DNA viruses.
Most RNA oncogenic viruses
belong to the family of
retroviruses that contain
reverse transcriptase
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Statistical Prevalence in
Different Worlds
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DNA-dependent
DNA polymerase
(Host or viral)
Host RNA
polymerase
Viral mRNA
Viral protein
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DNA-dependent RNA
RNA pol II)
messenger RNA
viral protein
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Virus
An enzyme that
normally
makes mRNA
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Adenovirus
SV40
Mesothelioma
HPV
Cervical Cancer
Squamous cell anal carcinoma
Penile cancer
Oral cancers
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carcinoma
Papilloma viruses are found in 91% of women with cervical cancer
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Epidemiology:
Strong correlation between
HBV and hepatocellular
carcinoma
China: 500,000 - 1
million new cases of
hepatocellular
carcinoma per year
Taiwan: Relative risk of
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getting HCC is 217
x MD
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Human Papillomavirus
(HPV)
Human Papillomavirus
(HPV) is a doublestranded DNA virus of
the family
Papovaviridae. It infects
only epithelial cells in
humans such as skin
and mucus membranes.
It can affect the lower
genital tract including
the vulva, vagina,
urethra, penis, anal
canal and perianal skin
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DNA viruses
Human Papilloma virus
(HPV), a DNA virus, causes transformation in
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Epstein-Barr virus
(Human herpes virus 4)
EBV is the herpes
virus that is most
strongly associated
with cancer. It infects
primarily lymphocytes
and epithelial cells. In
lymphocytes, the
infection is usually
non-productive, while
virus is shed
(productive infection)
from infected
epithelial cells.
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Burkitt's
lymphoma
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Infectious
mononucleosis
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Kaposis Sarcoma
Herpes Virus - HHV-8
Kaposis sarcoma
Hematologic malignancies
Primary effusion lymphoma
Multicentric Castleman's disease (MCD) a
rare lymphoproliferative disorder (AIDS)
MCD-related immunoblastic/plasmablastic
lymphoma
Various atypical lymphoproliferative
disorders
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RNA oncogenic
viruses
Retroviridae
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important
important
HIV
Spumavirinae
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Over-expression
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MDE6 & E7
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Hepatitis B
DNA virus with RNA
intermediate
In tumors virus is
integrated with little
gene expression
Believed to be from
chronic liver
damage/loss and
replacement causing
increased mutations
(similar to SOS
response?)
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Host enzyme
RNA Provirus
Reverse transcriptase
DNA genome
Viral enzyme
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HEPADNAVIRIDAE
HEPATITIS B VIRUS
Hepatitis B virus is very different from the
other DNA tumor viruses. Indeed, even
though it is a DNA virus, it is much more
similar to the oncornaviruses (RNA tumor
viruses) in its mode of replication. The DNA
is transcribed into RNA not only for the
manufacture of viral proteins but for
genome replication. Genomic RNA is
transcribed back into genomic DNA. This is
called reverse transcription. The latter is not
typical of most DNA tumor viruses but
reverse transcription is a very important
factor in the life cycles of RNA-tumor viruses
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Hepatocellular
carcinoma
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RNA Tumor
Viruses
Retroviruses known to cause human c
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Proto-oncogenes
Heterozygote
Dominant
mutationsHomozygote
Allele 1
Allele 2
Allele 1
Normal
Mutant
Mutant
Binds
Muta
under
nt
special
alway
circumstan
s
Always
binds
ces
binds
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Function
gained
Muta
nt
alway
s
binds
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Allele 2
Mutant
Muta
nt
alway
s
Always
binds binds
gained
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Anti-Oncogenes
Recessive mutations
Mutation
Rb Gene
growth
Mutant Rb
Mutant Rb
Mutant Rb
Rb
Rb
protein
Heterozygote
Rb
Homozygote
Function lost
No binding - Growth
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continues
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Anti-Oncogenes
Retinoblastoma gene has normal
regulatory function in many cells
Involved in
Retinoblastoma
Lung carcinomas
Breast carcinomas
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Growth factors
Growth factor receptors
Signal transduction proteins
Transcription factors
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Anti-Oncogenes
Retinoblastoma gene has normal
regulatory function in many cells
Involved in
Retinoblastoma
Lung carcinomas
Breast carcinomas
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Anti-Oncogenes
Retinoblastoma
Adenovirus E1A
Rb Gene
Rb
protein
Rb
105kD
Rb
Rb
Stops
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replication
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cycle continues
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Anti-Oncogenes
P53
Inactivated by
deletion
point mutation
In a series of colorectal cancers all showed:
Allele 1: partial or complete deletion
Allele 2: Point mutation
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Anti-Oncogenes
p53
P53 gene
P53 gene
Hepatitis C
P53
P53
P53 gene
Papilloma
P53
Papilloma
proteolysis
P53
DNA
Stops
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replication
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replication
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