Papillomaviruses (HPV)- discovery, epidemiology, detection Flashcards
Is HPV a DNA or RNA virus?
HPV is a DNA virus
In classical times, genital warts were linked with promiscuity. In the 1800s, Rigoni-Stern noticed cervical cancer in which groups of people?
Married women and prostitutes
In the 1900s, what was thought to be the cause of cervical cancer?
Firstly, transmissionable microbes. Then the use of molecular cloning allowed for the structure of PV to be studied and along with southern blotting elucidated that HPV-18 caused cervical cancer (instead of the previously thought Herpes virus)
Who is Harald Zur Hausen, Francoise Barre-Sinoussi and Luc Montagnier?
Hausen- Discovered HPV causing cervical cancer
Barre-Sinoussi + Montagnier- contributed to discovery of HIV
Which sort of species is HPV commonly found in?
Vertebrate species- dogs, mice, cats, cows, not just humans!
How big are HPV particles and their genomes? Are the warts that it causes benign or malignant?
Around 55nm diameter (small)+ 8kb double-stranded circular DNA genome. The warts are usually benign but can progress into malignancy
What species has been helpful in learning about HPV?
Transgenic mice. Most species are not very similar to humans so the lifecycle of HPV has been hard to study
In regards to the papillomavirus structure, what is the capsid like (what two main proteins form it) and does it have an envelope?
Icosahedral capsid (polyhedron with 20 faces). The two proteins are called L1 (major) and L2 (minor). The virus has a non-enveloped protein shell
Before the papillomavirus was classified in the Papillomaviridae family, which family was it under? What is the classification based on?
Papovavidae. The L1 major capsid protein sequence was used for the classification of HP
Why is antibody and serology not very useful in distinguishing between types of papillomaviruses?
Most of them are very similar
What are alpha PVs and what are beta PVs?
Alpha PVs are muscosal PVs; associated with ano-genital cancers e.g HPV 16 and 18 (cervical cancer related)
Beta PVs are cutaneous PVs; associated with non-melanoma skin cancers
(side note- alpha, beta and gamma= human types)
There are early and late regions of the genome. Knowing this, what prefix is given to those genes which are expressed early on and to those later?
‘E’ e.g E7 and ‘L’ e.g L2
What is the region ‘URR?’
The Upstream Regulatory Region- the region where DNA polymerases attach (called ‘ori’ for origin of replication) + binding site for post-RNA polymerase II that is involved in transcribing the open reading frames
Apart from using the host DNA polymerase, what does HPV have which helps in DNA replication?
E1 has a helicase activity which unwinds the DNA which binds to ‘ori’ and this is facilitated by E2. E2 is a transcription factor and represses E6 and E7 (oncoproteins)
What is E6, E7, E5 and E4 involved with? (brief)
E6 and E7 are oncoproteins and disrupt the cell growth cycle. E5 is involved with membrane protein signalling and is also considered an oncoprotein. E4 is involved in assembly and release of virus from epithelium