337: Describe the mechanisms by which viruses cause cancer
Intro
An oncovirus is a virus that can cause cancer Majority of viruses are not oncogenic and oncogenic viruses only rarely result in a tumor Cofactors often required e.g. diet, environmental carcinogens Cancer causing viruses might have been easlily prevented through vaccination or diagnoses with simple blood tests allowing treatment with less toxic antiviral compounds Tumorigenic association with hose offers no advantage to the virus- reduces viral yield, spread and threatens host life There are a number of viruses associated with causing cancer in humans :human papilloma virus Direct oncogenic mechanism; insertion of additional oncogenic genes into host or enhance already existing oncogenic genes in the genome Indirect viral oncogenecity involves chronic non specific inflammation occuring over decades of infection.
PDZ
E6 also mediates degradation of the cellular PDZ domain which assists in localisation of cellular elements --> its degradation contributes to cancer
P53
E6 binds and degrades cell protein P53. P53 acts as a tumour suppressor gene by causing cells to arrest if DNA damage has occurred. The degradation of P53 means tumours are not suppressed.
Telomerase
E6 induces the activation of telomerase. Many cancer cells can become "immortal" because telomerase replaces the DNA lost during replication, allowing cell line to divide without ever reaching the limit. Telomerase allows cells to live longer
Down regulation of MHC molecules
E7 downregulates the ability of MHC molecules --> Reduces the ability of body to detect something is wrong when there is decreased HPV presentation
Dysregulation of cell cycle
E7 dysregulates cell cycle through interaction with AP1 transcription complex and with CDK inhinitors PD1 and P27. Cell cycle dyssregulation is a hall mark of cancer cells
Rb
E7 inactivates a cell protein called Rb. Rb is a tumour supresser gene
Chromosome duplication errors
E7 induces chromosome duplication errors which leads to more mutations and genomic instability
E6 Oncoprotein
P53 PDZ Telomerase
Summary of viruses causing cancer
Persistent high risk HPV infection --> High viral load --> Integration of high risk HPV DNA genome into host chromosome --> Upregulation of E6 and E7 oncoproteins E6/7 effects TOGETHER, they induce a state of genomic instability This genomic instability coupled with other things including: Host immune factors, viral genetic factors, host and viral epigenetic factors, modulation of cellular and viral genes, environmental and dietary mutagens incl. tobacco, other sti's etc.. LEADS TO HPV ASSOCIATED SQUAMOUS CELL CARCINOMA
What are two main points?
Persistent infection, cell cycle degregulation AND Accumulation of secondary genetic changes
E7 Oncoprotein
Rb Chromosome duplication errors Dysregulates cell cycle through API transcription complex, CDK inhibitors Down regulation of MHC ability
Human papilloma viruses
Small non envelloped icosahedral virus which replicates in the nucleus of squamous epithelial cells Disease ranges from asymptomatic infections, benign warts, invasive tumors. Only high risk HPV types cause cancer 16,18 High risk have two oncoproteins E6 and E7 which can contribute to cancer Freq of progression to cancer is low Circular ds genomes