溶解循环
生物
爱泼斯坦-巴尔病毒
淋巴瘤
单核细胞增多症
BZLF1型
淋巴增殖性病變
病毒学
病毒
免疫学
癌症研究
疱疹病毒科
伽马赫氏病毒亚科
病毒性疾病
作者
Yusuke Okuno,Takayuki Murata,Yoshitaka Sato,Hideki Muramatsu,Yoshinori Ito,Takahiro Watanabe,Tatsuya Okuno,Norihiro Murakami,Kenichi Yoshida,Akihisa Sawada,Masami Inoue,Keisei Kawa,Masao Seto,Koichi Ohshima,Yuichi Shiraishi,Kenichi Chiba,Hiroko Tanaka,Satoru Miyano,Yohei Narita,Masahiro Yoshida
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41564-018-0334-0
摘要
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection is highly prevalent in humans and is implicated in various diseases, including cancer1,2. Chronic active EBV infection (CAEBV) is an intractable disease classified as a lymphoproliferative disorder in the 2016 World Health Organization lymphoma classification1,2. CAEBV is characterized by EBV-infected T/natural killer (NK) cells and recurrent/persistent infectious mononucleosis-like symptoms3. Here, we show that CAEBV originates from an EBV-infected lymphoid progenitor that acquires DDX3X and other mutations, causing clonal evolution comprising multiple cell lineages. Conspicuously, the EBV genome in CAEBV patients harboured frequent intragenic deletions (27/77) that were also common in various EBV-associated neoplastic disorders (28/61), including extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma and EBV-positive diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, but were not detected in infectious mononucleosis or post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders (0/47), which suggests a unique role of these mutations in neoplastic proliferation of EBV-infected cells. These deletions frequently affected BamHI A rightward transcript microRNA clusters (31 cases) and several genes that are essential for producing viral particles (20 cases). The deletions observed in our study are thought to reactivate the lytic cycle by upregulating the expression of two immediate early genes, BZLF1 and BRLF14-7, while averting viral production and subsequent cell lysis. In fact, the deletion of one of the essential genes, BALF5, resulted in upregulation of the lytic cycle and the promotion of lymphomagenesis in a xenograft model. Our findings highlight a pathogenic link between intragenic EBV deletions and EBV-associated neoplastic proliferations.
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