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High-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of KSHV tumorigenesis

Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), is an AIDS-associated neoplasm caused by the KS herpesvirus (KSHV/ HHV-8). KSHV-induced sarcomagenesis is the consequence of oncogenic viral gene expression as well as host genetic and epigenetic alterations. Although KSHV is found in all KS-lesions, the percentage of KSH...

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Autores principales: Naipauer, Julian, Salyakina, Daria, Journo, Guy, Rosario, Santas, Williams, Sion, Abba, Martin, Shamay, Meir, Mesri, Enrique A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7357787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32603362
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008589
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author Naipauer, Julian
Salyakina, Daria
Journo, Guy
Rosario, Santas
Williams, Sion
Abba, Martin
Shamay, Meir
Mesri, Enrique A.
author_facet Naipauer, Julian
Salyakina, Daria
Journo, Guy
Rosario, Santas
Williams, Sion
Abba, Martin
Shamay, Meir
Mesri, Enrique A.
author_sort Naipauer, Julian
collection PubMed
description Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), is an AIDS-associated neoplasm caused by the KS herpesvirus (KSHV/ HHV-8). KSHV-induced sarcomagenesis is the consequence of oncogenic viral gene expression as well as host genetic and epigenetic alterations. Although KSHV is found in all KS-lesions, the percentage of KSHV-infected (LANA+) spindle-cells of the lesion is variable, suggesting the existence of KS-spindle cells that have lost KSHV and proliferate autonomously or via paracrine mechanisms. A mouse model of KSHVBac36-driven tumorigenesis allowed us to induce KSHV-episome loss before and after tumor development. Although infected cells that lose the KSHV-episome prior to tumor formation lose their tumorigenicity, explanted tumor cells that lost the KSHV-episome remained tumorigenic. This pointed to the existence of virally-induced irreversible oncogenic alterations occurring during KSHV tumorigenesis supporting the possibility of hit and run viral-sarcomagenesis. RNA-sequencing and CpG-methylation analysis were performed on KSHV-positive and KSHV-negative tumors that developed following KSHV-episome loss from explanted tumor cells. When KSHV-positive cells form KSHV-driven tumors, along with viral-gene upregulation there is a tendency for hypo-methylation in genes from oncogenic and differentiation pathways. In contrast, KSHV-negative tumors formed after KSHV-episome loss, show a tendency towards gene hyper-methylation when compared to KSHV-positive tumors. Regarding occurrence of host-mutations, we found the same set of innate-immunity related mutations undetected in KSHV-infected cells but present in all KSHV-positive tumors occurring en exactly the same position, indicating that pre-existing host mutations that provide an in vivo growth advantage are clonally-selected and contribute to KSHV-tumorigenesis. In addition, KSHV-negative tumors display de novo mutations related to cell proliferation that, together with the PDGFRAD842V and other proposed mechanism, could be responsible for driving tumorigenesis in the absence of KSHV-episomes. KSHV-induced irreversible genetic and epigenetic oncogenic alterations support the possibility of “hit and run” KSHV-sarcomagenesis and point to the existence of selectable KSHV-induced host mutations that may impact AIDS-KS treatment.
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spelling pubmed-73577872020-07-22 High-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of KSHV tumorigenesis Naipauer, Julian Salyakina, Daria Journo, Guy Rosario, Santas Williams, Sion Abba, Martin Shamay, Meir Mesri, Enrique A. PLoS Pathog Research Article Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), is an AIDS-associated neoplasm caused by the KS herpesvirus (KSHV/ HHV-8). KSHV-induced sarcomagenesis is the consequence of oncogenic viral gene expression as well as host genetic and epigenetic alterations. Although KSHV is found in all KS-lesions, the percentage of KSHV-infected (LANA+) spindle-cells of the lesion is variable, suggesting the existence of KS-spindle cells that have lost KSHV and proliferate autonomously or via paracrine mechanisms. A mouse model of KSHVBac36-driven tumorigenesis allowed us to induce KSHV-episome loss before and after tumor development. Although infected cells that lose the KSHV-episome prior to tumor formation lose their tumorigenicity, explanted tumor cells that lost the KSHV-episome remained tumorigenic. This pointed to the existence of virally-induced irreversible oncogenic alterations occurring during KSHV tumorigenesis supporting the possibility of hit and run viral-sarcomagenesis. RNA-sequencing and CpG-methylation analysis were performed on KSHV-positive and KSHV-negative tumors that developed following KSHV-episome loss from explanted tumor cells. When KSHV-positive cells form KSHV-driven tumors, along with viral-gene upregulation there is a tendency for hypo-methylation in genes from oncogenic and differentiation pathways. In contrast, KSHV-negative tumors formed after KSHV-episome loss, show a tendency towards gene hyper-methylation when compared to KSHV-positive tumors. Regarding occurrence of host-mutations, we found the same set of innate-immunity related mutations undetected in KSHV-infected cells but present in all KSHV-positive tumors occurring en exactly the same position, indicating that pre-existing host mutations that provide an in vivo growth advantage are clonally-selected and contribute to KSHV-tumorigenesis. In addition, KSHV-negative tumors display de novo mutations related to cell proliferation that, together with the PDGFRAD842V and other proposed mechanism, could be responsible for driving tumorigenesis in the absence of KSHV-episomes. KSHV-induced irreversible genetic and epigenetic oncogenic alterations support the possibility of “hit and run” KSHV-sarcomagenesis and point to the existence of selectable KSHV-induced host mutations that may impact AIDS-KS treatment. Public Library of Science 2020-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7357787/ /pubmed/32603362 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008589 Text en © 2020 Naipauer et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Naipauer, Julian
Salyakina, Daria
Journo, Guy
Rosario, Santas
Williams, Sion
Abba, Martin
Shamay, Meir
Mesri, Enrique A.
High-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of KSHV tumorigenesis
title High-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of KSHV tumorigenesis
title_full High-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of KSHV tumorigenesis
title_fullStr High-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of KSHV tumorigenesis
title_full_unstemmed High-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of KSHV tumorigenesis
title_short High-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of KSHV tumorigenesis
title_sort high-throughput sequencing analysis of a “hit and run” cell and animal model of kshv tumorigenesis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7357787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32603362
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008589
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