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1.
Cancer Cell ; 42(7): 1138-1141, 2024 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38848719

ABSTRACT

While cancer research and care have benefited from revolutionary advances in the ability to manipulate and study living systems, the field is limited by a lack of synergy to leverage the power of engineering approaches. Cancer engineering is an emerging subfield of biomedical engineering that unifies engineering and cancer biology to better understand, diagnose, and treat cancer. We highlight cancer engineering's unique challenges, the importance of creating dedicated centers and departments that enable translational collaboration, and educational approaches to arm a new generation of scientists with engineering expertise and a fundamental understanding of cancer biology to transform clinical cancer care.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms , Humans , Neoplasms/therapy , Neoplasms/genetics , Biomedical Engineering/methods , Biomedical Engineering/trends , Animals
2.
mBio ; 7(2): e00297, 2016 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27006465

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Simian virus 40 (SV40), a polyomavirus that has served as an important model to understand many aspects of biology, induces dramatic cytoplasmic vacuolization late during productive infection of monkey host cells. Although this activity led to the discovery of the virus in 1960, the mechanism of vacuolization is still not known. Pentamers of the major SV40 capsid protein VP1 bind to the ganglioside GM1, which serves as the cellular receptor for the virus. In this report, we show that binding of VP1 to cell surface GM1 plays a key role in SV40 infection-induced vacuolization. We previously showed that SV40 VP1 mutants defective for GM1 binding fail to induce vacuolization, even though they replicate efficiently. Here, we show that interfering with GM1-VP1 binding by knockdown of GM1 after infection is established abrogates vacuolization by wild-type SV40. Vacuole formation during permissive infection requires efficient virus release, and conditioned medium harvested late during SV40 infection rapidly induces vacuoles in a VP1- and GM1-dependent fashion. Furthermore, vacuolization can also be induced by a nonreplicating SV40 pseudovirus in a GM1-dependent manner, and a mutation in BK pseudovirus VP1 that generates GM1 binding confers vacuole-inducing activity. Vacuolization can also be triggered by purified pentamers of wild-type SV40 VP1, but not by GM1 binding-defective pentamers or by intracellular expression of VP1. These results demonstrate that SV40 infection-induced vacuolization is caused by the binding of released progeny viruses to GM1, thereby identifying the molecular trigger for the activity that led to the discovery of SV40. IMPORTANCE: The DNA tumor virus SV40 was discovered more than a half century ago as a contaminant of poliovirus vaccine stocks, because it caused dramatic cytoplasmic vacuolization of permissive host cells. Although SV40 played a historically important role in the development of molecular and cellular biology, restriction mapping, molecular cloning, and whole-genome sequencing, the basis of this vacuolization phenotype was unknown. Here, we show that SV40-induced vacuolization is triggered by the binding of the major viral capsid protein, VP1, to a cell surface ganglioside receptor, GM1. No other viral proteins or virus replication is required for vacuole formation. Other polyomaviruses utilize different ganglioside receptors, but they do not induce vacuolization. This work identifies the molecular trigger for the phenotype that led to the discovery of this important virus and provides the first molecular insight into an unusual and enigmatic cytopathic effect due to virus infection.


Subject(s)
Capsid Proteins/metabolism , G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Simian virus 40/physiology , Vacuoles/metabolism , Animals , Cell Line , Chlorocebus aethiops , Receptors, Virus/metabolism
4.
J Virol ; 87(18): 10105-13, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23843634

ABSTRACT

BK polyomavirus (BKV) causes significant urinary tract pathogenesis in immunosuppressed individuals, including kidney and bone marrow transplant recipients. It is currently unclear whether BKV-neutralizing antibodies can moderate or prevent BKV disease. We developed reporter pseudoviruses based on seven divergent BKV isolates and performed neutralization assays on sera from healthy human subjects. The results demonstrate that BKV genotypes I, II, III, and IV are fully distinct serotypes. While nearly all healthy subjects had BKV genotype I-neutralizing antibodies, a majority of subjects did not detectably neutralize genotype III or IV. Surprisingly, BKV subgenotypes Ib1 and Ib2 can behave as fully distinct serotypes. This difference is governed by as few as two residues adjacent to the cellular glycan receptor-binding site on the virion surface. Serological analysis of mice given virus-like particle (VLP)-based BKV vaccines confirmed these findings. Mice administered a multivalent VLP vaccine showed high-titer serum antibody responses that potently cross-neutralized all tested BKV genotypes. Interestingly, each of the neutralization serotypes bound a distinct spectrum of cell surface receptors, suggesting a possible connection between escape from recognition by neutralizing antibodies and cellular attachment mechanisms. The finding implies that different BKV genotypes have different cellular tropisms and pathogenic potentials in vivo. Individuals who are infected with one BKV serotype may remain humorally vulnerable to other BKV serotypes after implementation of T cell immunosuppression. Thus, prevaccinating organ transplant recipients with a multivalent BKV VLP vaccine might reduce the risk of developing posttransplant BKV disease.


Subject(s)
BK Virus/genetics , BK Virus/physiology , Viral Tropism , Virus Internalization , Animals , Antibodies, Neutralizing/blood , Antibodies, Viral/blood , BK Virus/classification , DNA, Viral/chemistry , DNA, Viral/genetics , Female , Genotype , Humans , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Molecular Sequence Data , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Serotyping , Viral Vaccines/administration & dosage , Viral Vaccines/immunology
5.
J Virol ; 86(13): 7028-42, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22514351

ABSTRACT

Polyomaviruses are nonenveloped viruses with capsids composed primarily of 72 pentamers of the viral VP1 protein, which forms the outer shell of the capsid and binds to cell surface oligosaccharide receptors. Highly conserved VP1 proteins from closely related polyomaviruses recognize different oligosaccharides. To determine whether amino acid changes restricted to the oligosaccharide binding site are sufficient to determine receptor specificity and how changes in receptor usage affect tropism, we studied the primate polyomavirus simian virus 40 (SV40), which uses the ganglioside GM1 as a receptor that mediates cell binding and entry. Here, we used two sequential genetic screens to isolate and characterize viable SV40 mutants with mutations in the VP1 GM1 binding site. Two of these mutants were completely resistant to GM1 neutralization, were no longer stimulated by incorporation of GM1 into cell membranes, and were unable to bind to GM1 on the cell surface. In addition, these mutant viruses displayed an infection defect in monkey cells with high levels of cell surface GM1. Interestingly, one mutant infected cells with low cell surface GM1 more efficiently than wild-type virus, apparently by utilizing a different ganglioside receptor. Our results indicate that a small number of mutations in the GM1 binding site are sufficient to alter ganglioside usage and change tropism, and they suggest that VP1 divergence is driven primarily by a requirement to accommodate specific receptors. In addition, our results suggest that GM1 binding is required for vacuole formation in permissive monkey CV-1 cells. Further study of these mutants will provide new insight into polyomavirus entry, pathogenesis, and evolution.


Subject(s)
Gangliosidosis, GM1/metabolism , Receptors, Virus/metabolism , Simian virus 40/physiology , Viral Structural Proteins/genetics , Viral Structural Proteins/metabolism , Viral Tropism , Virus Attachment , Amino Acid Substitution , Animals , Binding Sites , Cell Line , Humans , Simian virus 40/genetics
6.
Virology ; 422(1): 114-24, 2012 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22056390

ABSTRACT

Repression of human papillomavirus (HPV) E6 and E7 oncogenes in established cervical carcinoma cell lines causes senescence due to reactivation of cellular tumor suppressor pathways. Here, we determined whether ongoing expression of HPV16 or HPV18 oncogenes is required for the proliferation of primary human cervical carcinoma cells in serum-free conditions at low passage number after isolation from patients. We used an SV40 viral vector expressing the bovine papillomavirus E2 protein to repress E6 and E7 in these cells. To enable efficient SV40 infection and E2 gene delivery, we first incubated the primary cervical cancer cells with the ganglioside GM1, a cell-surface receptor for SV40 that is limiting in these cells. Repression of HPV in primary cervical carcinoma cells caused them to undergo senescence, but the E2 protein had little effect on HPV-negative primary cells. These data suggest that E6 and E7 dependence is an inherent property of human cervical cancer cells.


Subject(s)
Human papillomavirus 16/genetics , Human papillomavirus 18/genetics , Oncogene Proteins, Viral/metabolism , Papillomavirus E7 Proteins/metabolism , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/pathology , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/virology , Cell Proliferation , Cellular Senescence , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Female , Gangliosidosis, GM1/metabolism , Human papillomavirus 16/physiology , Human papillomavirus 18/physiology , Humans , Oncogene Proteins, Viral/biosynthesis , Oncogene Proteins, Viral/genetics , Papillomavirus E7 Proteins/genetics , Repressor Proteins/genetics , Repressor Proteins/metabolism , Simian virus 40/genetics , Simian virus 40/physiology , Tumor Cells, Cultured , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/genetics
7.
mBio ; 2(3): e00101-11, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21673190

ABSTRACT

Simian virus 40 (SV40) is a nonenveloped DNA virus that traffics through the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) en route to the nucleus, but the mechanisms of capsid disassembly and ER exit are poorly understood. We conducted an unbiased RNA interference screen to identify cellular genes required for SV40 infection. SV40 infection was specifically inhibited by up to 50-fold by knockdown of four different DNAJ molecular cochaperones or by inhibition of BiP, the Hsp70 partner of DNAJB11. These proteins were not required for the initiation of capsid disassembly, but knockdown markedly inhibited SV40 exit from the ER. In addition, BiP formed a complex with SV40 capsids in the ER in a DNAJB11-dependent fashion. These experiments identify five new cellular proteins required for SV40 infection and suggest that the binding of BiP to the capsid is required for ER exit. Further studies of these proteins will provide insight into the molecular mechanisms of polyomavirus infection and ER function.


Subject(s)
Endoplasmic Reticulum/enzymology , Endoplasmic Reticulum/virology , HSP40 Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Simian virus 40/pathogenicity , Animals , Cell Line , Chlorocebus aethiops , Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Endoplasmic Reticulum Chaperone BiP , Humans
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