9b- EBV Flashcards
What are the EBV associated neoplasms?
- lymphomas
- endemic Burkitt lymphoma
- post-transplant lymphoma
- extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma (nasal type)
- nasopharyngeal carcinoma
Describe the major EBV virion features
- gammaherpesvirus
- all herpes viruses (including EBV) have 2 life cycles; lytic replication and latency
- large double stranded DNA genome
- enveloped (labile in the environment)
Describe the lytic replication cycle
- virus binds and fuses to host cell membrane
- viral DNA transported to nucleus
- viral DNA circularizes and associates with histones (to look more like host DNA)
- alpha/beta/gamma genes expressed
- viral DNA packaged into capsid and released
What are the main roles of alpha, beta, and gamma genes in lytic replication?
- alpha gene products transactivate transcription of beta genes
- beta gene products are required for DNA synthesis
- gamma gene products are structural components of the virion
Describe the mechanism of EBV latent infection and its reactivation
- same infection steps as lytic replication
- histone-associated viral DNA instead becomes latent however, with little to no expression
- EBV reactivation from B cells is triggered by B cell differentiation into plasma cells (reactivation mechanism not understood)
- poorly controlled reactivation is a significant risk factor for EBV-driven malignancies
Why do most EBV-associated lymphomas have germinal center markers?
Because most lymphomas arise from B cells within the germinal center (undergoing proliferation and differentiation)
How does infection with EBV differ by age?
- EBV acquired in the first decade of life leads to mild cold-like symptoms
- in developing countries >95% of kids are infected by 3 years old
- in developed countries ~70% of 12 year olds are EBV positive
- EBV acquired in adolescence and beyond leads to acute infectious mononucleosis
What are the characteristics of infectious mononucleosis?
- massive CD8+ T cell expansion (Downey cells)
- significant increase in activated B cells (very few EBV infected)
- leads to transient increase in Ab production
- basis for the heterophile mono spot test
What are the symptoms of infectious mononucelosis?
- symptoms:
- fever
- lymphadenopathy/hepatosplenomegaly
- pharyngitis
- malaise and fatigue
- virus in saliva
- lab data:
- atypical lymphocytes
- heterophile antibody titer
What are the proposed mechanisms of viral oncogenesis?
What evidence is there against the theory of direct transformation?
- the historical theory was the expression of EBV latency proteins is necessary for oncogenesis
- recently, it has been showed not only that latency proteins are NOT necessary but lytic proteins MAY be necessary for oncogenesis