Infectious Agents Flashcards

1
Q

Give examples of early work on viruses and cancer?

A

1908 - Ellerman and Bang
= identify infectious leukaemia in chickens

1911 - Rous
= shows virus could induce sarcomas in chickens
= RSV - Rous sarcoma virus

1933
= Rabbit papillomavirus identified

1936
= mouse mammary tumour virus discovered (MMTV)
= spread through breast feeding

1950s
= mouse leukaemia / polyoma viruses identified

1960s
= adenovirus / SV40 shown to induce tumours in rodents

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2
Q

What is the Rous experiment?

A
  1. Chicken with sarcoma in breast muscle
  2. Remove sarcoma and break up into small pieces + grind up with sand
  3. Collect filtrate passed through fine pore filter
    (does NOT let cells through - only viruses)
  4. Inject filtrate into young chicken
  5. Observe sarcoma in injected chicken
    (over just few weeks)
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3
Q

What is RSV ? What is it’s structure?

A

= Rous Sarcoma Virus

= retrovirus

env = encodes surface glycoprotein

gag = encodes proteins that comprise the coat

pol = encodes reverse transcriptase that plays an essential role in lifecycle

(lipid bilayer = acquired from infected cell)

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4
Q

What is the retrovirus lifecycle?

A
  1. Attachment and entry
    = retrovirus attach to receptors on surface of host cells, and then enter the cells through fusion or endocytosis
  2. Reverse transcription
    = retrovirus release its RNA genome
    = enzyme reverse transcriptase converts it into DNA
    = DNA (known as provirus) integrated into host cell’s DNA
  3. Transcription and translation
    = integrated provirus can remain latent
    = eventually transcribed and translated into viral proteins
  4. Assembly and budding
    = viral proteins and RNA assemble at host cell membrane to form new virus particles
    = they bud off and released into extracellular space
  5. Infection of new host cells
    = newly released virus particles go on to infect new host cells
    = life cycle repeated
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5
Q

What does RSV infection cause? What does it require?

A

= aberrant growth
(e.g. cells in petri dish form focus)

= requires presence of active viral proteins (for cancerous phenotype)
= transformation of cell
= is temperature sensitive = suggests protein involved (when temp raised, transformed phenotype lost)

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6
Q

What does the src gene do?

A

Src
= additional gene in RSV genome
(found to be avian in origin)
= oncogene

s-src = non-receptor tyrosine kinase

v-Src lacks Tyrosine-527
= therefore is permanently switched on
= proliferation

= in active form (compared to inactive) kinase site NOT occluded and so phosphorylation continues downstream = proliferation

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7
Q

What is ALV?

A

= avian leukosis virus
(induces leukaemia)

= slowly transforming retrovirus
(carcinogenesis takes longer)

= provirus inserts randomly into the host genome

= very occasionally (1 in 10 million) inserts upstream of c-myc
(myc = transcription factor that drives expression of proliferation genes)

= induction of cancer is rare

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8
Q

What are some examples of Human Cancer Viruses?

A

EBV - Epstein Barr Virus
= dsDNA herpesvirus
= Burkitt’s lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma (+some Hodkins / Non-hodgkins lymphoma)

HBV - Hepatitis B Virus
= ssDNA and dsDNA hepadenovirus
= hepatocellular carcinoma

HTLV-I - Human T-lymphotrophic virus-I
= + strand, ssRNA retrovirus
= adult T cell leukaemia

HPV - High-risk Human Papillomaviruses
= dsDNA papillomavirus
= cervical, penile, anal and head and neck cancers

HCV - Hepatitis C virus
= + strand, ssRNA flavivirus
= hepatocellular carcinoma

KSHV - Kaposi’s Sarcoma Herpesvirus
= dsDNA herpesvirus
= Kaposi’s sarcoma
= primary effusion lymphoma
= multicentric castlman’s disease

MCV - Merkel Cell Polyomavirus
= dsDNA polyomavirus
= merkel cell carcinoma

EXTRA READING
HHV-8 - Human herpesvirus 8
= herpes virus
= associated with Kaposi’s sarcoma, especially in HIV/AIDS patients

BKPyV - Polyomavirus BK
= DNA virus
= associated with kidney / bladder cancer

Adenovirus
= some types linked to adenocarcinomas of lung and GI tract

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9
Q

What is the link between HPV and cervical cancer?

A

Cervical cancer
= 4th most common cancer in women worldwide
= 86% in developing world
= 2nd most common cancer in young women

HPV
= dsDNA virus
= many subtypes = most innocuous (cause warts)
= show tissue tropism
= high risk HPV 16 and HPV 18 cause cervical cancer

EXTRA READING
= other types that cause cervical cancer
= HPV31, 33, 45, 52, 58 (less common)

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10
Q

What is the HPV lifecycle?

A
  1. Entry
    = HPV enters through small breaks in skin / mucus membrane (sexual contact)
  2. Attachment
    = virus attaches to surface of epithelial cell
  3. Internalisation
    = virus enters cell, begins to replicated DNA
  4. Early gene expression (e.g. E6, E7)
    = virus produces several early genes involved in viral replication and evasion of host immune system
  5. Genome amplification
    = virus replicates its DNA and amplifies its genome within epithelial cells
  6. Late genome expression
    = virus produces late genes involved in production of viral capsid proteins
  7. Capsid assembly
    = viral capsid protein assemble to form mature virions
  8. Release
    = mature virions are released from infected cell, infect other cells
  9. Shedding
    = infected cells shed from surface of skin / mucus membrane = transmission
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11
Q

What are episomes? How do they relate to HPV?

A

= circular DNA molecules

HPV 16/18
= integrate into host’s cell chromosome as episomes
= disrupts normal cell functioning
= leads to production of viral proteins that promote cell growth and division
= eventually leads to cervical cancer

= this episomal DNA is more stable
= can replicate independently of host cell’s genome = leads to production of more viral DNA = increases likelihood of cancer

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12
Q

What does E7 / E6 do? What are their tumour-promoting effects?

A

E7 = binds to RB = targets it for degradation
= allows cell cycle entry (S phase), uncontrolled proliferation

= also binds to RB-related proteins, inhibiting their function too

E6 = tags p53 with Ub for degradation by proteasome
= damaged DNA continues to divide and replicate

= reason why cervical cancer does NOT have high rate of p53 mutations

Both E6/E7 have further tumour promoting effects:
= E6 = depresses expression of hTERT (component of telomerase)
= E6 = stimulates expression of VEGF (angiogenic factor)
= E6 + E7 = stimulate genomic instability

= E6 + E7 = can promote all stages of carcinogenesis (aberrant proliferation, extended proliferation, indefinite life span, cellular transformation)

EXTRA READING
= also involved in MAPK pathways, PI3K.Akt pathways

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13
Q

What are some other examples of infections linked to cancer?

A

Southeast Asian Liver fluke
= Opisthorchis viverrini
= liver cancer

Bilharzia
= Schistosoma hematobium
= bladder cancer

Heliobacter pylori
= stomach cancer

EXTRA READING
= some E.coli = colorectal cancer
= fungi = Aspergillus spp. = lung cancer
= chronic inflammation

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14
Q

What is Helicobacter pylori?

A

= bacteria (NOT virus)

= estimated to cause up to 90% of stomach cancers

= causes chronic inflammation:
(chronic superficial gastritis = atrophic gastritis = dysplasia = carcinoma)

= carcinogenesis driven partly by chronic inflammation and resultant genotoxic stress

= also some specific virulence factors
(e.g. CagA)

= induces number of pro-inflammatory carcinogenic changes in gastric cells

EXTRA READING
= CagA = injected by T4SS = leads to cellular changes = inflammation and tissue damage
= other virulence factors: VacA, LPS, Adhesins, Proteases, Urease

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15
Q

What does CagA do?

A

= virulence factor

  1. = allows H. pylori to bind to integrins on basolateral surface
  2. = Type IV secretion system injects peptidoglycan and CagA into cell
    (T4SS encoded by cag pathogenicity island)
  3. = pleiotropic effects:
    (disrupts cytoskeleton, cell polarity, cell junctions, is mitogenic and inflammatory)
  4. = stimulates inflammatory response

EXTRA READING:
= one key target of CagA = protein tyrosine phosphatases SHP-2
= also interacts with ZO-1 tight junction protein
= PAR1/MARK polarity protein
= receptor tyrosine kinase EGFR

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