chapter 3: tumor viruses

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Chapter 3: Tumor Viruses eyton Rous discovers a chicken sarcoma virus (1911)

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Chapter 3: Tumor Viruses. Peyton Rous discovers a chicken sarcoma virus (1911). Rous sarcoma virus is discovered to transform infected cells in culture. Renato Dulbecco (California IT). Harry Rubin/ An RSV-induced focus. Howard Temin/ Transformation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 3: Tumor Viruses

Chapter 3: Tumor VirusesPeyton Rous discovers a chicken sarcoma virus (1911)

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Rous sarcoma virus is discovered to transform infected cells in culture

Retrovirus

Renato Dulbecco (California IT)

Harry Rubin/ An RSV-induced focus

Howard Temin/ Transformation

Howard Temin, 1975 Nobel Prize with David Baltimore

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Transformed cells forming foci.

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The continued presence of RSV is needed to maintain transformation

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Shope papillomavirusViruses containing DNA molecules are also able to induce cancer

SV40 virus

Permissive hostPolio vaccine (Sabin and Salk) contaminated with SV40 from 1955 to 1963

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Anchorage-independent growth

Nude mice

Tumor viruses induce multiple changes in cell phenotype including acquisition of tumorigenicity

Transformation

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Tumor virus genomes persist in virus-transformed cellsby becoming part of host-cell DNA

Almost all cervical cancer found HPV genome

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The life cycle of an RNA tumor virus like RSV.

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A version of the src gene carried by RSV is also present in uninfected cells

Structure of the RSV genome

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The construction of a src-specific DNA probe.

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RSV exploits a kidnapped cellular gene to transform cells

Proto-oncogene

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The vertebrate genome carries a large group of protooncogenes

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The vertebrate genome carries a large group of protooncogenes

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Slowly transforming retroviruses activate protooncogenesby inserting their genomes adjacent to these cellular genes

Some retroviruses naturally carry oncogenes

Insertional mutagenesis

ALV/ lack acquired oncogenesB-call lymphomas induced by ALV

HTLV-I/ tax (transcription activator)

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Chapter 4: Cellular Oncogenes

Can cancers be triggered by the activation ofendogenous retroviruses?

Transfection of DNA provides a strategy for detecting nonviral oncogenes

Transfection

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Transformation of mouse cells by human tumor DNA

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Oncogenes discovered in human tumor cell lines are related to those carried by transforming retroviruses

Homology between transfected and retroviral oncogenes.

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Amplification of the erbB2/HER2/neu oncogene in breast cancers

Fluorescence in situ hybridization

Kaplan-Meier plot

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Elevated expression of 17q genes together with overexpression of rebB2/HER2

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Nonrandom amplifications and deletions of chromosomal regions

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Proto-oncogenes can be activated by genetic changes affecting either protein expression or structure

Cloning of transfected human oncogenes

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Localization of an oncogene-activating mutant

transfection-focus assay

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Mutation responsible for H-ras oncogene activation

Concentration of point mutations leading to activation of the K-ras oncogene

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Variations on a theme: the myc oncogene can arise via at least three additional distinct mechanisms

N-myc amplification and neuroblastomaGenemycMYC

ProteinMycMYC

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Burkitt’s lymphoma incidence in Africa

Chromosomal translocations in Burkitt’s lymphoma

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Translocations liberating an mRNA from miRNA inhibition

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A diverse array of structural changes in proteins can also lead to oncogene activation

Deregulated firing of growth factor receptors

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Formation of the bcr-abl oncogene

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