| Literature DB >> 22240795 |
Abstract
The DNA damage response (DDR) has emerged as a critical tumour suppressor pathway responding to cellular DNA replicative stress downstream of aberrant oncogene over-expression. Recent studies have now implicated the DDR as a sensor of oncogenic virus infection. In this review, we discuss the mechanisms by which tumour viruses activate and also suppress the host DDR. The mechanism of tumour virus induction of the DDR is intrinsically linked to the need for these viruses to promote an S-phase environment to replicate their nucleic acid during infection. However, inappropriate expression of viral oncoproteins can also activate the DDR through various mechanisms including replicative stress, direct interaction with DDR components and induction of reactive oxygen species. Given the growth-suppressive consequences of activating the DDR, tumour viruses have also evolved mechanisms to attenuate these pathways. Aberrant expression of viral oncoproteins may therefore promote tumourigenesis through increased somatic mutation and aneuploidy due to DDR inactivation. This review will focus on the interplay between oncogenic viruses and the DDR with respect to cellular checkpoint control and transformation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22240795 PMCID: PMC3273341 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2011.612
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Human oncogenic viruses and their interactions with the host DNA damage response
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| EBV | Burkitt's lymphoma, post-transplant lymphoma, non-Hodgkin's/diffuse large B cell lymphomas, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, gastric carcinoma | EBNA2/LP → DDR | ( |
| EBNA1 → ROS → DDR | ( | ||
| EBNA3C ⊣ early DDR | ( | ||
| EBNA3C⊣Chk2,p53 | ( | ||
| EBNA3C⊣ G2/M checkpoint | ( | ||
| LMP1⊣ATM | ( | ||
| KSHV | Kaposi's sarcoma, primary effusion lymphoma | v-cyclin → ATM | ( |
| LANA → myc → DDR | ( | ||
| LANA:p53 | ( | ||
| HPV | Cervical cancer, ovarian cancer | E6,E7 → repl stress → DDR | ( |
| E7:pATM | ( | ||
| E6⊣p53 | ( | ||
| HBV | Hepatocellular carcinoma | HBV → ATR | ( |
| HBx → Ras → DDR | ( | ||
| HBx ⊣ p53 | ( | ||
| HTLV I | ATL | Tax⊣DNA-PK | ( |
| Tax⊣Chk1/Chk2 | ( | ||
| Tax⊣p53 | ( |
Abbreviations: ATL=adult T-cell leukaemia; DDR=DNA damage response; EBV=Epstein–Barr virus; HBV=hepatitis B virus; HPV=human papillomavirus; HTLV-I=human T-lymphotropic virus type I.
Figure 1Interplay between viral oncoproteins and the host DDR. Viral oncoproteins activate cellular oncogenes (green arrows top level) in order to enter or re-enter the cell cycle, thereby inducing replicative stress and causing DNA single-stranded breaks (ssDNA). ssDNA and DNA double-stranded breaks (DSB) generated during repair of single-stranded DNA recognised by ATR and ATM kinases, respectively, which master regulate downstream signalling (all targets not shown), including activation of Chk2 and p53. Tumour virus oncoproteins modulate the function of DDR components by activating (green arrows) or suppressing (shown in red) their expression or activity.