* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download 幻灯片 1
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Viruses and Cancer Folder Title: CxVirus(NoTP) Updated: April 19, 2016 See Chapter 3, Weinberg, 2nd Edition pages 71 to 102 Turning Point Opening Slide Rank 1 2 3 Responses 4 5 6 0% 0% 1 2 0% 0% 3 4 0% 0% 5 6 Importance of Virology to Cancer Biology and Cancer Medicine • Need to Control Potentially Infectious Exposure • Development of Prophylactic and Therapeutic Vaccines • Learning About Cancer Biology from Viruses: How Do They Do It? What do those mechanisms of transformation tell us about cancer biology? What do those virally perturbed genes tell us about normal cell biology? The Discovery of Oncogenes (Presented in Cancer Genetics Chapter 4) Infectious Agents in Neoplasia Non-Viral Agents • Parasitic Worms - Hepatic Sarcomas and Bladder Cancers in Dogs • Crown Gall Tumor in Plants: Agrobacter Tumifaciens • Helicobacter pylori: Stomach cancer • • • • • • • • Viral Causation Ellerman & Bang Avian Leucosis Virus 1909 Rous Sarcoma Virus in Chickens 1911 Shope Papilloma Virus in Rabbits 1930 Bittner Milk Factor in C3H Mice 1936 Gross Murine Leukemia Virus 1945 Friend Erythroleukemia Virus 1957 Hepatitis B Virus (HPV) Human T-Cell Lymphotrophic Virus (HTLV-1) 1980 (Bernie Poiesz and Robert Gallo) Demonstration that a Non-Cellular Infectious Agent Could Generate a Cancer: Peyton Rous and the Rous Sarcoma Virus 1912 Later Found to be an RNA Genome (Retro-virus) Named RSV = Rous Sarcoma Virus Why So Hard to Identify Viral Causative Agents in Cancer? Difficult to Infect Outbred Adult Hosts. Virally Transformed Cells Need Not (and usually don't) • Shed, bud, otherwise produce, or even show the presence of virus particles • Viruses can sometimes be recovered ("rescued") from transformed cells Viruses are exquisitely specific for target species, tissue, and conditions of binding and insertion. Viruses tend to transform host cells other than their normal infectious target. How Might Viruses Cause Cell Transformation & Oncogenesis? • Carry and directly transfer cancer causing genes by infecting target cells? • Be present in the germ line as provirus copies in the host DNA From infection in times past Reactivated by carcinogenic events? • Be inserted into the host cell genome and misregulate endogenous host genes? • Infect host cells and produce viral proteins that alter host cell genetics and phenotype? General Structural Features of Oncogenic Viruses DNA Viruses: • DNA Genome • Double Stranded Linear • Double Stranded Closed Circular • Single Stranded RNA Viruses ("Retro-Viruses") • RNA Genome • Two Copies of Single Stranded RNA • Retroviral Genome replication by reverse transcription • Makes a DNA "Provirus" Copy • Can be naked or enveloped (See Adenoviruses) DNA and RNA Tumor Viruses: Have Potential to Alter Host DNA Structure or Expression During Viral Infection of the Cell RNA Virus DNA Virus Naked Enveloped DNA Virus DNA Virus p. 79 Human Cancers All others are DNA Viruses RNA Retro-virus Table 4.6 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) p. 114 DNA Tumor Viruses Structure of DNA Tumor Viruses: 1 Naked DNA Tumor Viruses Double-stranded DNA & Capsid Proteins (No Envelope) Papova Viruses: Polyoma, Papilloma, Vacuolating Viruses Papova Viruses: Shope Papilloma, Simian Vacuolating Virus 40 : SV40 Polyoma Virus : Multiple Tumor Foci Structure of DNA Tumor Viruses: 2 Enveloped DNA Tumor Viruses: • Double-stranded DNA & Capsid Proteins • Glycoprotein - Lipid Envelope Examples Herpes Simplex Viruses 1 and 2 Epstein-Barr Virus Cytomegalovirus Hepadna Viruses (Hepatitis B) Families of DNA Tumor Viruses Causing or Possibly-causing Naturally Occurring Neoplasms or Able to Transform Mammalian Cells in Vitro Hepadna Hepatitis B Papilloma (Papova A) Shope Rabbit Canine, Equine, Human Human Benign Papilloma Papova B Polyoma SV40 Human papova Unknown Adenovirus Human Ovine Sheep Marek's Pig herpes Bovine Epstein-Barr Chicken Guinea pig Cattle Human Herpes Human Hepatocellular Carcinoma Woodchuck, Duck, Squirrel Mouse Monkey Cervical Carcinoma Unknown Lymphosarcoma Leukemia Lymphoma Burkitt's Lymphoma Nasopharyngeal carcinoma Some DNA Tumor Viruses in Humans (from Tannock & Hill) Cancers and Related Diseases Epstein-Barr Virus Burkitt's Lymphoma (C) Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (A) Infectious Mononucleosis (C) Lymphoma in X-linked Lymphoproliferative Syndrome (C) Papilloma Viruses Cervical Carcinoma (C) Papova Viruses Meningiomas (A) Progressive Leucencephalopathy (C) Hepatitis B (Hepadna) Hepatocellular Carcinoma (C) ("C" = Causative "A" = Associated) Productive infection making new infectious virus particles Aborted infection producing transformed cells Infection Cycle for DNAVirus Productive Infection producing virus particles Figure 3.3 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) p. 60 Mechanism of Action of Tumorigenic Viruses 3 Turning Point Questions Please clear desk of notes and devices other than the TP Transmitter Retro-viruses and RNA-Tumor Viruses Structure of an RNAVirus (Retrovirus) See Figure 3.4, Weinberg 2nd Edition, p. 75 p. 62 Figure 3.4a The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) Structure of Enveloped RNA Viruses and RNA Tumor viruses Retroviral Infection of DNA-Genome Cells: Provirus Insertion RNA-Virus Infection of a Cell with DNA-Genome Start Here Figure 3.17 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) p. 74 Rous Sarcoma Virus Transformed Normal Chicken Embryo Fibroblasts Normal Cells p. 77 Virally Transformed Cells p. 82 HIVInfect HIVBud HIVExit Structure of RNA (“Retro”) Viruses: and RNA Tumor Viruses Enveloped Virus with RNA Genome • Single Stranded, Diploid, Non-complementary • Positive Polarity: Acts Directly as Message • 9 kb; 3 to 4 million mw per strand • Viral envelope host-derived RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase ("Reverse transcriptase) • Transcribes RNA to complementary DNA: Provirus Virus coded protein spikes in envelop: • Control host range Virus coded proteins in core membrane Nucleoid inside core with genome, some RNA's, and reverse transcriptase RNA Tumor Virus May carry additional genetic information (acutely transforming) or may perturb host cell genetic information by virtue of insertion (Sub-acute transforming virus) How Might Viruses Cause Cell Transformation & Oncogenesis? • Carry and directly transfer cancer causing genes by infecting target cells? • Be present in the germ line as provirus copies in the host DNA From infection in times past Reactivated by carcinogenic events? • Be inserted into the host cell genome and misregulate endogenous host genes? • Infect host cells and produce viral proteins that alter host cell genetics and phenotype? • See Also Slide 5 Examples of Oncogenic RNA Viruses (from Ruddon, 3rd Ed, Table 6.2) Acute Transforming Viruses (carry on oncogene) Rous Sarcoma (non-defective) Avian Erythroblastosis Avian Myeloblastosis Avian Myelocytomatosis Abelson Leukemia Harvey Sarcoma Kirsten Sarcoma Feline Sarcoma Simian Sarcoma See Table 3.3, p.81, Weinberg, for comprehensive listing Chicken Sarcoma Chicken Leukemia Chicken Leukemia Chicken Mouse Leukemia Rat Sarcoma Rat Sarcoma Cat Sarcoma Monkey Sarcoma Examples of Oncogenic RNA Viruses Acute Transforming Viruses What Genetic Information Makes Them Oncogenic? Virus Rous Sarcoma Avian Erythroblastosis Avian Myeloblastosis Avian Myelocytomatosis Abelson Leukemia Harvey Sarcoma Kirsten Sarcoma Feline Sarcoma Simian Sarcoma Disease Chicken Sarcoma Chicken Leukemia Chicken Leukemia Chicken Leucoproliferation Mouse Leukemia Rat Sarcoma Rat Sarcoma Cat Sarcoma Monkey Sarcoma Extra Gene src erb myb Myc abl Ha-ras Ki-ras fms sis Where Do the Acutely Transforming RNA-Viruses get their Oncogenes From? Acquisition by a sub-acutely transforming virus of a c-onc Gene to produce a v-onc gene p. 92 2nd Edition Figure 3.22 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) p. 95, Part 1 Part 2, Page 95 Acutely Transforming vs Sub-Acutely Transforming RNA Viruses ALV: Sub-acutely transforming virus with no endogenous oncogene RSV: Rous Sarcoma Virus carrying endogenous oncogene (src) Figure 3.19 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) Examples of Oncogenic RNA Viruses Sub-Acute Chronic Type Do Not Transduce an Oncogene Avian Leucosis Murine Leukemia Feline Leukemia Friend Murine Leukemia Mouse Mammary Tumor Human T Lymphotropic Transforms Hematopoietic Cells Mouse Leukemia Cat Leukemia Reticulum Cell Sarcoma & Erythroleukemia Mammary Cancers (Vertical transmission) Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma If they don’t carry on oncogene, how do they transform cells? Insertional Mutagenesis: Viral Promoter Control of Expression of Endogenous c-Oncogenes C onc gene! ALV = Avian Leucosis Virus: (Sub-acutely Transforming) Figure 3.23b The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) p. 83 Avian & Mammalian p. 98 3 Turning Point Question Please clear desk of notes and devices other than the TP Transmitter End Cancer Virology Here 2 Turning Point Questions Please clear desk of notes and devices other than the TP Transmitter HTLVI Oncogenic Viruses Associated with Cancers in Humans (from Ruddon, 3rd Edition)