BK病毒
生物
癌症研究
多瘤病毒感染
梅克尔多元癌细胞病毒
癌症
癌变
移植
病毒学
肾
遗传学
肾移植
癌
医学
内科学
梅克尔细胞癌
作者
David C. Müller,Maarit Rämö,Klaudia Naegele,Sebastian Ribi,Christian Wetterauer,Valeria Perrina,Luca Quagliata,Tatjana Vlajnic,Christian Ruiz,Beate Balitzki,Rainer Grobholz,Rainer Gosert,Elvis Ajuh,Hans H. Hirsch,Lukas Bubendorf,Cyrill A. Rentsch
摘要
BK polyomavirus has been linked to urothelial carcinoma in immunosuppressed patients. Here, we performed comprehensive genomic analysis of a BK polyomavirus-associated, metachronous, multifocal and metastatic micropapillary urothelial cancer in a kidney transplant recipient. Dissecting cancer heterogeneity by sorting technologies prior to array-comparative genomic hybridization followed by short tandem repeat analysis revealed that the metastatic urothelial cancer was of donor origin (4-year-old male). The top 50 cancer-associated genes showed no key driver mutations as assessed by next-generation sequencing. Whole genome sequencing and BK polyomavirus-specific amplification provided evidence for episomal and subgenomic chromosomally integrated BK polyomavirus genomes, which carried the same unique 17-bp deletion signature in the viral non-coding control region (NCCR). Whereas no role in oncogenesis could be attributed to the host gene integration in chromosome 1, the 17-bp deletion in the NCCR increased early viral gene expression, but decreased viral replication capacity. Consequently, urothelial cells were exposed to high levels of the transforming BK polyomavirus early proteins large tumour antigen and small tumour antigen from episomal and integrated gene expression. Surgery combined with discontinuation of immunosuppression resulted in complete remission, but sacrificed the renal transplant. Thus, this report links, for the first time, BK polyomavirus NCCR rearrangements with oncogenic transformation in urothelial cancer in immunosuppressed patients. Copyright © 2017 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI