| Literature DB >> 18047745 |
Julia Shackelford1, Joseph S Pagano.
Abstract
Tumor viruses are linked to approximately 20% of human malignancies worldwide. This review focuses on examples of human oncogenic viruses that manipulate the ubiquitin system in a subset of viral malignancies; those associated with AIDS. The viruses include Kaposi's sarcoma herpesvirus, Epstein-Barr virus and human papilloma virus, which are causally linked to Kaposi's sarcoma, certain B-cell lymphomas and cervical cancer, respectively. We discuss the molecular mechanisms by which these viruses subvert the ubiquitin system and potential viral targets for anti-cancer therapy from the perspective of this system. Publication history: Republished from Current BioData's Targeted Proteins database (TPdb; http://www.targetedproteinsdb.com).Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18047745 PMCID: PMC2106372 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2091-8-S1-S8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biochem ISSN: 1471-2091 Impact factor: 4.059
Viral products manipulate the ubiquitin system in AIDS-related cancers. Summarized here is recent information on the relations between tumor viruses and host cell systems. The general strategy through which the ubiquitin system is manipulated, the effector proteins and the host target proteins are indicated for KSHV, EBV and HPV.
| Kaposi's sarcoma (KSHV) | Immunoblastic B-cell lymphomas (EBV) | Cervical cancer (HPV) | |
| Virus-encoded ubiquitin ligases | Dysregulation of host ubiquitin system | Dysregulation of host ubiquitin system | |
| KSHV K3, K5 and RTA | EBV LMP1 | HPV E6 and E7 | |
| MHC class I, IRF7 | β-catenin, PHD/HIFa, IRF7 | p53, pRb |