| Literature DB >> 30483380 |
Samira Izi1, Masoud Youssefi2,3, Farzad Rahmani1, Nema Mohammadian Roshan4, Atefeh Yari2, Farnaz Zahedi Avval1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Factors contributing to development of gastric cancer are still under investigation. The JC Virus (JCV), as an oncogenic virus, has been indicated to play a possible role in gastric carcinogenesis. Theoretically, tumor antigen (T-Ag), the viral transforming protein, is capable of binding and inactivating tumor suppressor proteins p53 and pRb, there by promoting cancer development although such a role in gastric cancer is still controversial and additional data is needed to reach a definite conclusion. The prevalence of the virus varies in different geographic regions, therefore, we aimed to investigate JCV presence in cancerous gastric tissues of Iranian patients.Entities:
Keywords: Oncogenic virus; Real-time PCR; Tumor antigen; Tumor suppressor proteins
Year: 2018 PMID: 30483380 PMCID: PMC6243149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran J Microbiol ISSN: 2008-3289
Primer sequences for amplification of JC Virus T-Ag.
| JCV T-Antigen F | 5′-GGA TTA GTG GCA CAG TTA GG -3′ | 4700-4719 |
| JCV T-Antigen R | 5′-CGA AGA CAA GAT GAA GAG AAT G -3′ | 4870-4849 |
Based on JC virus sequence Genbank
Fig. 1.Melting curve analysis. (A) Amplicons from reference gene. The single peak observed is typically interpreted as representing a pure, single amplicon. (B) Amplicons from samples. The specificity of amplicons was verified by melting curve analysis after 35 cycles and agarose gel electrophoresis. Fluorescence melting peaks for the T-Ag gene, no separate heteroduplex products were apparent. Specific signals had melting temperatures of 81.4 ± 0.05°C.
Fig. 2.Standard curve analysis. Synthetic DNA standard curves for absolute quantification of JC-T-Ag by real-time PCR. The JCV-Mad-1 T-Ag sequence that cloned in a pBHA plasmid vector was serially diluted (from 100 to 108 copies of positive control DNA) and served as a standard reference. High amplification efficiency has also been shown by a good linear relationship among each concentration.
Fig. 3.PCR amplification of T-antigen of JCV in gastric cancer and non-neoplastic tissues. A 171 bp bond corresponding to amplified sequences are shown. (+C; positive control, −C; negative control)
Fig. 4.Panel A: Colon cancer cells infected by JC virus were used as a positive control, of which 20–30% cells were positive. (grade III); Panel B, C, D: These photomicrographs show immunohistochemical staining for JCV T-Ag in gastric tumor tissue samples. B. Tumor sample without expression of T-Ag. C. a weak and focal positive nuclear staining can be observed in the nuclei of tumor cells (shown in brown; grade I) D. positive staining in the nuclei of tumor cells (grade II); Panel E: Positive staining of grade I in the nuclei of endothelial cells of healthy mucosa surrounding a gastric adenocarcinoma. Original magnification ×400.