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On page 1 showing 1 ~ 2 papers out of 2 papers

Characterization of viable mutants of polyomavirus cold sensitive for maintenance of cell transformation.

  • D Templeton‎ et al.
  • Journal of virology‎
  • 1984‎

We mutagenized a cloned fragment of polyoma DNA encoding portions of the middle size (MT) and large T antigens. We regenerated infectious viral genomes containing the mutagenized DNA and tested their transforming ability at 32 and 39 degrees C. We isolated three nontransforming mutants and two mutants which were cold sensitive for the maintenance of cell transformation. The nontransforming mutants contained amber termination codons in the reading frame for the MT antigen. They synthesized truncated MT antigens which lacked MT-associated protein kinase activity. The cold-sensitive mutants synthesized MT antigens indistinguishable from wild type with regard to size, stability at 32 and 39 degrees C, intracellular location, and associated protein kinase activity. One of the mutants was shown by nucleotide sequence analysis to contain a single amino acid change in the MT antigen, located two residues upstream from the C-terminal hydrophobic region, and no changes in the large T antigen. The other mutant contained two amino acid changes in the MT antigen and two amino acid changes in the large T antigen.


Direct cellular reprogramming enables development of viral T antigen-driven Merkel cell carcinoma in mice.

  • Monique E Verhaegen‎ et al.
  • The Journal of clinical investigation‎
  • 2022‎

Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is an aggressive neuroendocrine skin cancer that frequently carries an integrated Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) genome and expresses viral transforming antigens (TAgs). MCC tumor cells also express signature genes detected in skin-resident, postmitotic Merkel cells, including atonal bHLH transcription factor 1 (ATOH1), which is required for Merkel cell development from epidermal progenitors. We now report the use of in vivo cellular reprogramming, using ATOH1, to drive MCC development from murine epidermis. We generated mice that conditionally expressed MCPyV TAgs and ATOH1 in epidermal cells, yielding microscopic collections of proliferating MCC-like cells arising from hair follicles. Immunostaining of these nascent tumors revealed p53 accumulation and apoptosis, and targeted deletion of transformation related protein 53 (Trp53) led to development of gross skin tumors with classic MCC histology and marker expression. Global transcriptome analysis confirmed the close similarity of mouse and human MCCs, and hierarchical clustering showed conserved upregulation of signature genes. Our data establish that expression of MCPyV TAgs in ATOH1-reprogrammed epidermal cells and their neuroendocrine progeny initiates hair follicle-derived MCC tumorigenesis in adult mice. Moreover, progression to full-blown MCC in this model requires loss of p53, mimicking the functional inhibition of p53 reported in human MCPyV-positive MCCs.


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