Novel Organizational Features, Captured Cellular Genes, and Strain Variability Within the Genome of KSHV/HHV8
Strong serologic and molecular probe correlations indicate that the newly discovered gamma herpesvirus KSHV or HHV8 is the likely etiologic agent of all forms of Kaposi's sarcoma as well as BCBL/PEL and MCD in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Two large segments of HHV8 D...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Monographs 1998-04, Vol.1998 (23), p.79-88 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Strong serologic and molecular probe correlations indicate that
the newly discovered gamma herpesvirus KSHV or HHV8 is the likely
etiologic agent of all forms of Kaposi's sarcoma as well as
BCBL/PEL and MCD in patients with acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (AIDS). Two large segments of HHV8 DNA from an
AIDS-associated BCBL tumor covering genomic positions 0-52
kilobase [kb] and 108-140 kb have been cloned, mapped,
and partially sequenced. Our studies have focused on novel viral
proteins encoded within a 13-kb divergent locus (DL-B) by nine
captured homologues of cellular genes, including vIL-6, vDHFR,
vTS, vBcl-2, three C-C beta chemokines (vMIP-1A, vMIP-1B, and
vBCK), and two LAP/PHD subclass zinc finger proteins (IE1A and
IE1B). The HHV-8 vIL-6, vDHFR, vTS, and vBcl-2 proteins have all
been shown to be active in a variety of appropriate functional
assays, and transcripts from vIL-6, vMIP-1B, vIE1-A, vIE1-B, and
vDHFR genes are all expressed as abundant single messenger RNA
species after butyrate or phorbol ester (TPA) induction of the
lytic cycle in HHV8-positive BCBL cell lines. All of these genes
lie within a divergent transcriptional domain that contains a
single central enhancer and associated untranslated leader region
plus seven distinct proximal promoters, some of which are
negatively regulated through AP-1 and ZRE motifs by the EBV ZTA
transactivator. This region also encompasses a predicted complex
oriLyt domain of 1050 bp that is duplicated in inverted
orientation adjacent to the T0.7 latency RNA in another large
divergent locus (DL-E). We have previously described three
distinct subtypes of the HHV8 genome that differ by
1.0%-1.5% at the nucleotide level within the ORF26
and ORF75 genes. Certain strains or clades appear to have
preferential geographic distributions, but it is not known as yet
whether there are any specific disease associations.
Interestingly, the A, B, and C subtypes of HHV-8 also proved to
differ dramatically in coding content at both the extreme left
and right ends of the unique segment of the genome as well as in
the positions of the junctions with the terminal repeats. On the
left-hand side, the receptor-like ORF-K1 protein is highly
variable with A-strain subtypes displaying 15% amino acid
differences from C strains and up to 30% differences from
B strains. On the right-hand side, two unrelated alternative
types of the putative multiple membrane spanning ORF-K15 protein
are found. |
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ISSN: | 1052-6773 1745-6614 |
DOI: | 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jncimonographs.a024179 |