Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 30
Filter
1.
Viruses ; 12(9)2020 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32882975

ABSTRACT

In the fifty years since the discovery of JC polyomavirus (JCPyV), the body of research representing our collective knowledge on this virus has grown substantially. As the causative agent of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), an often fatal central nervous system disease, JCPyV remains enigmatic in its ability to live a dual lifestyle. In most individuals, JCPyV reproduces benignly in renal tissues, but in a subset of immunocompromised individuals, JCPyV undergoes rearrangement and begins lytic infection of the central nervous system, subsequently becoming highly debilitating-and in many cases, deadly. Understanding the mechanisms allowing this process to occur is vital to the development of new and more effective diagnosis and treatment options for those at risk of developing PML. Here, we discuss the current state of affairs with regards to JCPyV and PML; first summarizing the history of PML as a disease and then discussing current treatment options and the viral biology of JCPyV as we understand it. We highlight the foundational research published in recent years on PML and JCPyV and attempt to outline which next steps are most necessary to reduce the disease burden of PML in populations at risk.


Subject(s)
JC Virus/physiology , Polyomavirus Infections/virology , Tumor Virus Infections/virology , Animals , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , JC Virus/genetics , Polyomavirus Infections/diagnosis , Polyomavirus Infections/drug therapy , Polyomavirus Infections/history , Tumor Virus Infections/diagnosis , Tumor Virus Infections/drug therapy , Tumor Virus Infections/history
2.
Aging (Albany NY) ; 12(16): 15978-15994, 2020 07 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32735554

ABSTRACT

The betaretrovirus Mouse Mammary Tumor Virus (MMTV) is the well characterized etiological agent of mammary tumors in mice. In contrast, the etiology of sporadic human breast cancer (BC) is unknown, but accumulating data indicate a possible viral origin also for these malignancies. The presence of MMTVenv-like sequences (MMTVels) in the human salivary glands and saliva supports the latter as possible route of inter-human dissemination. In the absence of the demonstration of a mouse-man transmission of MMTV, we considered the possibility that a cross-species transmission could have occurred in ancient times. Therefore, we investigated MMTVels in the ancient dental calculus, which originates from saliva and is an excellent material for paleovirology. The calculus was collected from 36 ancient human skulls, excluding any possible mouse contamination. MMTV-like sequences were identified in the calculus of 6 individuals dated from the Copper Age to the 17th century. The MMTV-like sequences were compared with known human endogenous betaretroviruses and with animal exogenous betaretroviruses, confirming their exogenous origin and relation to MMTV. These data reveal that a human exogenous betaretrovirus similar to MMTV has existed at least since 4,500 years ago and indirectly support the hypothesis that it could play a role in human breast cancer.


Subject(s)
Betaretrovirus/isolation & purification , Breast Neoplasms/virology , Cell Transformation, Viral , Retroviridae Infections/transmission , Tumor Virus Infections/transmission , Viral Zoonoses/transmission , Adolescent , Adult , Animals , Betaretrovirus/genetics , Breast Neoplasms/history , Breast Neoplasms, Male/history , Breast Neoplasms, Male/virology , DNA, Viral/genetics , Female , History, 15th Century , History, 16th Century , History, 17th Century , History, Ancient , History, Medieval , Humans , Male , Mammary Tumor Virus, Mouse/genetics , Middle Aged , Phylogeny , Retroviridae Infections/history , Retroviridae Infections/virology , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Tumor Virus Infections/virology , Viral Zoonoses/history , Viral Zoonoses/virology , Young Adult
5.
PLoS One ; 10(7): e0132172, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26147570

ABSTRACT

Sylvilagus floridanus Papillomavirus (SfPV) causes growth of large horn-like tumors on rabbits. SfPV was described in cottontail rabbits (probably Sylvilagus floridanus) from Kansas and Iowa by Richard Shope in 1933, and detected in S. audubonii in 2011. It is known almost exclusively from the US Midwest. We explored the University of Kansas Natural History Museum for historical museum specimens infected with SfPV, using molecular techniques, to assess if additional wild species host SfPV, and whether SfPV occurs throughout the host range, or just in the Midwest. Secondary aims were to detect distinct strains, and evidence for strain spatio-temporal specificity. We found 20 of 1395 rabbits in the KU collection SfPV symptomatic. Three of 17 lagomorph species (S. nuttallii, and the two known hosts) were symptomatic, while Brachylagus, Lepus and eight additional Sylvilagus species were not. 13 symptomatic individuals were positive by molecular testing, including the first S. nuttallii detection. Prevalence of symptomatic individuals was significantly higher in Sylvilagus (1.8%) than Lepus. Half of these specimens came from Kansas, though new molecular detections were obtained from Jalisco-Mexico's first-and Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, and Texas, USA. We document the oldest lab-confirmed case (Kansas, 1915), pre-dating Shope's first case. SfPV amplification was possible from 63.2% of symptomatic museum specimens. Using multiple methodologies, rolling circle amplification and, multiple isothermal displacement amplification in addition to PCR, greatly improved detection rates. Short sequences were obtained from six individuals for two genes. L1 gene sequences were identical to all previously detected sequences; E7 gene sequences, were more variable, yielding five distinct SfPV1 strains that differing by less than 2% from strains circulating in the Midwest and Mexico, between 1915 and 2005. Our results do not clarify whether strains are host species specific, though they are consistent with SfPV specificity to genus Sylvilagus.


Subject(s)
Cottontail rabbit papillomavirus/isolation & purification , Papillomavirus Infections/veterinary , Rabbits/virology , Skin Neoplasms/veterinary , Animals , Antigens, Viral/genetics , Base Sequence , Colorado/epidemiology , Cottontail rabbit papillomavirus/genetics , Cottontail rabbit papillomavirus/pathogenicity , DNA, Viral/genetics , DNA, Viral/isolation & purification , Genes, Viral , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Host Specificity , Kansas/epidemiology , Mexico/epidemiology , Midwestern United States/epidemiology , Molecular Sequence Data , Museums , Oncogene Proteins, Viral/genetics , Papillomavirus Infections/epidemiology , Papillomavirus Infections/history , Papillomavirus Infections/virology , Phylogeny , Rabbits/classification , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid , Skin Neoplasms/epidemiology , Skin Neoplasms/history , Skin Neoplasms/virology , Species Specificity , Tumor Virus Infections/epidemiology , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Tumor Virus Infections/veterinary , Tumor Virus Infections/virology , Viral Structural Proteins/genetics
6.
Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci ; 48 Pt B: 218-30, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25282391

ABSTRACT

In 1960, J. Anthony Morris, a molecular biologist at the US National Institutes of Health conducted one of the only non-therapeutic clinical studies of the cancer virus SV40. Morris and his research team aimed to determine whether SV40 was a serious harm to human health, since many scientists at the time suspected that SV40 caused cancer in humans based on evidence from in vivo animal studies and experiments with human tissue. Morris found that SV40 had no significant effect but his claim has remained controversial among scientists and policymakers through the present day--both on scientific and ethical grounds. Why did Morris only conduct one clinical study on the cancer-causing potential of SV40 in healthy humans? We use the case to explain how empirical evidence and ethical imperatives are, paradoxically, often dependent on each other and mutually exclusive in clinical research, which leaves answers to scientific and ethical questions unsettled. This paper serves two goals: first, it documents a unique--and uniquely important--study of clinical research on SV40. Second, it introduces the concept of "the stowaway," which is a special type of contaminant that changes the past in the present moment. In the history of science, stowaways are misfortunes that nonetheless afford research that otherwise would have been impossible specifically by creating new pasts. This case (Morris' study) and concept (the stowaway) bring together history of science and philosophy of history for productive dialog.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research/history , Morals , Polyomavirus Infections/history , Prisons/history , Simian virus 40 , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Virology/history , Animals , Biomedical Research/ethics , Historiography , History, 20th Century , Humans , Molecular Biology/history , National Institutes of Health (U.S.)/history , Nontherapeutic Human Experimentation/ethics , Nontherapeutic Human Experimentation/history , Polyomavirus Infections/virology , Prisoners/history , Respiratory Syncytial Viruses , Science/ethics , Science/history , Tumor Virus Infections/virology , United States , Virology/ethics
7.
Semin Cancer Biol ; 26: 4-12, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24304907

ABSTRACT

Controversy has plagued tumor virology since the first tumor viruses were described over 100 years ago. Methods to establish cancer causation, such as Koch's postulates, work poorly or not at all for these viruses. Kaposi's sarcoma herpesvirus (KSHV/HHV8) and Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV) were both found using nucleic acid identification methods but they represent opposite poles in the patterns for tumor virus epidemiology. KSHV is uncommon and has specific risk factors that contribute to infection and subsequent cancers. MCV and Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC), in contrast, is an example in which mutations to our normal viral flora contribute to cancer. Given the near-ubiquity of human MCV infection, establishing cancer causality relies on molecular evidence that does not fit comfortably within traditional infectious disease epidemiological models. These two viruses reveal some of the challenges and opportunities for inferring viral cancer causation in the age of molecular biology.


Subject(s)
Herpesvirus 8, Human/physiology , Merkel cell polyomavirus/physiology , Neoplasms/etiology , Oncogenic Viruses/physiology , Tumor Virus Infections/complications , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Neoplasms/epidemiology , Neoplasms/history , Tumor Virus Infections/epidemiology , Tumor Virus Infections/history
8.
J BUON ; 15(1): 174-81, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20414947

ABSTRACT

Retroviruses have been found in many bird and animal species where they often cause various types of cancer. Dr. Robert Gallo's contribution to the field of retrovirology and the link he established between RNA viruses and cancer has been significant. Historical aspects of his discoveries in the area of human retroviruses are presented and an attempt is made to focus attention on his outstanding role.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms/history , Retroviridae Infections/history , Retroviridae , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , HIV/isolation & purification , HIV Infections/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Interleukin-2/history , Neoplasms/virology , Retroviridae/isolation & purification , Retroviridae Infections/virology , Tumor Virus Infections/virology
12.
Adv Cancer Res ; 98: 53-116, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17433908

ABSTRACT

For over a century, mouse mammary tumor biology and the associated Mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) have served as the foundation for experimental cancer research, in general, and, in particular, experimental breast cancer research. Spontaneous mouse mammary tumors were the basis for studies of the natural history of neoplasia, oncogenic viruses, host responses, endocrinology, and neoplastic progression. However, lacking formal proof of a human mammary tumor virus, the preeminence of the mouse model faded in the 1980s. Since the late 1980s, genetically engineered mice (GEM) have proven extremely useful for studying breast cancer and have become the animal model for human breast cancer. Hundreds of mouse models of human breast cancer have been developed since the first demonstration, in 1984, that the mouse mammary gland could be molecularly targeted and used to test the oncogenicity of candidate human genes. Now, very few scientists can avoid using a mouse model to test the biology of their favorite gene. The GEM have attracted a new generation of molecular and cellular biologists eager to apply their skills to these surrogates of the human disease. Newcomers often enter the field without an appreciation of the origins of mouse mammary tumor biology and the basis for many of the prevailing concepts. Our purpose in writing this short history of mouse mammary tumor biology is to provide a historical perspective for the benefit of the newcomers. If Einstein was correct in that "we stand on the shoulders of giants," the neophytes should meet their giants.


Subject(s)
Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental/history , Mammary Tumor Virus, Mouse/isolation & purification , Retroviridae Infections/history , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Animals , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic , Disease Models, Animal , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Mammary Tumor Virus, Mouse/genetics , Mice
13.
Folia Biol (Praha) ; 50(3-4): 78-86, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15373340

ABSTRACT

Jan Svoboda has had an extraordinary influence on my research. Following our first meeting in 1967, he encouraged me to pursue my tentative evidence for the existence of endogenous retroviruses latent in normal cells. He introduced me to the Czech scientists, Pavel Veselý and Jan Závada, with whom I collaborated fruitfully on the transformed cell phenotype and on virus pseudotypes, respectively. Through my brief training in his laboratory in Prague I gained a breadth and depth of analysis in virology, immunology and oncology that helped me subsequently to tackle problems in AIDS and AIDS-associated malignancy at the levels of both cell biology and epidemiology.


Subject(s)
Tumor Virus Infections/history , Virology/history , Animals , Cell Transformation, Viral , Czechoslovakia , HIV Infections/immunology , HIV Infections/virology , History, 20th Century , Humans , Immunity , Retroviridae Infections/history , Retroviridae Infections/immunology , Retroviridae Infections/virology , Tumor Virus Infections/immunology , Tumor Virus Infections/virology
15.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 356(1408): 413-20, 2001 Apr 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11313002

ABSTRACT

The persisting ancient view of cancer as a contagious disease ended with 19th century scientific investigations which seemed to show it was not. The resulting dogma against an infectious cause for cancer produced great prejudice in the scientific community against the first report of an oncogenic virus by Rous early in the 20th century and, even in the 1950s, against Gross's finding of a murine leukaemia virus and a murine virus causing solid tumours. The Lucké frog renal carcinoma virus was the first cancer-associated herpesvirus. Intriguingly, an environmental factor, ambient temperature, determines virus genome expression in the poikilothermic frog cells. Although an alpha-herpesvirus, Marek's disease virus of chickens shares some aspects of biological behaviour with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) of man. Very significantly, its lymphomas are the first naturally occurring malignancy to be controlled by an antiviral vaccine, with implications for human virus-associated cancers. The circumstances and climate of opinion in which successive gamma-herpesviruses were discovered are described. The identification of EBV involved two unconventionalities: its finding in cultured Burkitt's lymphoma cells when no human lymphoid cell had ever been maintained in vitro, and its recognition in the absence of biological activity by the then new technique of electron microscopy. These factors engendered hostility to its acceptance as a new human tumour-associated virus. The EBV-like agents of Old World apes and monkeys and the T-lymphotropic gamma-herpesviruses of New World monkeys were found at about the same time, not long after the discovery of EBV. For many years these were thought to be the only gamma-herpesviruses of non-human primates; however, very recently B-lymphotropic EBV-like agents have been identified in New World species as well. Mouse herpesvirus 68 came to light by chance during a search for arboviruses and has become important as a laboratory model because of its close genetic relatedness to EBV and its comparable biological behaviour. The discovery of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus six years ago was made using unconventional new methods, but, unlike with EBV 30 years before, this did not hinder its acceptance. This contrast is discussed in the context of the great progress in human tumour virology which has been made in recent years.


Subject(s)
Virology/history , Animals , Birds , Herpesvirus 2, Gallid , History, 20th Century , Humans , Neoplasms/history , Neoplasms/virology , Oncogenic Viruses , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Tumor Virus Infections/virology , Viral Vaccines
18.
Medicina (B Aires) ; 57 Suppl 2: 3-18, 1997.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9567340

ABSTRACT

The discovery of RNA oncoviruses dates back to 1911 when Rous isolated the avian virus which is the cause of the sarcoma which bears his name and to 1936 when Bittner related the "milk factor" to the development of murine mammary cancer. During the 50s, the successive descriptions of virus-induced sarcoma-leukemias in mice led to the oncogene theory and gradually to the postulation of a viral origin of cancer. The discovery of the reverse transcriptase in 1970 led to the establishment of the Retroviridae family including both onco and lentiviruses. The decade of the 80s was marked by three fundamental discoveries which altered the concept of oncovirus: 1) oncogenes became established as part of the cellular genome converting retroviruses into occasional vectors of the oncogene; 2) as the T cell growth factor, interleukin-2, became available, the first human oncovirus, HTLV-I, was isolated and proved to be the cause of adult T cell leukemia; 3) HIV was isolated and classified as a lentivirus and as the cause of AIDS. A few years later the antioncogenes were discovered. Both oncogenes and anti-oncogenes were found to collaborate in the cell cycle, maintaining an equilibrium between proliferation and apoptosis. Today the viral theory has been replaced by the gene theory of cancer which postulates that neoplastic transformation is the result of a cascade of events which include uncorrected DNA errors, blocking of apoptosis, activation of oncogenes and deletion of antioncogenes. At the present time, the intriguing question for retrovirologists is the role played by endogenous retroviruses which in man occupy up to 0.1% of the cellular genome.


Subject(s)
Retroviridae , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Animals , Apoptosis , Genes, Tumor Suppressor , Genome, Viral , History, 20th Century , Humans , Mice , RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase , Retroviridae/classification , Retroviridae/genetics , Retroviridae/growth & development , Retroviridae Infections/genetics , Tumor Virus Infections/genetics
19.
Anon.
Medicina (B.Aires) ; 57(supl.2): 3-18, 1997.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-321744

ABSTRACT

The discovery of RNA oncoviruses dates back to 1911 when Rous isolated the avian virus which is the cause of the sarcoma which bears his name and to 1936 when Bittner related the "milk factor" to the development of murine mammary cancer. During the 50s, the successive descriptions of virus-induced sarcoma-leukemias in mice led to the oncogene theory and gradually to the postulation of a viral origin of cancer. The discovery of the reverse transcriptase in 1970 led to the establishment of the Retroviridae family including both onco and lentiviruses. The decade of the 80s was marked by three fundamental discoveries which altered the concept of oncovirus: 1) oncogenes became established as part of the cellular genome converting retroviruses into occasional vectors of the oncogene; 2) as the T cell growth factor, interleukin-2, became available, the first human oncovirus, HTLV-I, was isolated and proved to be the cause of adult T cell leukemia; 3) HIV was isolated and classified as a lentivirus and as the cause of AIDS. A few years later the antioncogenes were discovered. Both oncogenes and anti-oncogenes were found to collaborate in the cell cycle, maintaining an equilibrium between proliferation and apoptosis. Today the viral theory has been replaced by the gene theory of cancer which postulates that neoplastic transformation is the result of a cascade of events which include uncorrected DNA errors, blocking of apoptosis, activation of oncogenes and deletion of antioncogenes. At the present time, the intriguing question for retrovirologists is the role played by endogenous retroviruses which in man occupy up to 0.1 of the cellular genome.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Mice , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Retroviridae , Apoptosis , Genes, Tumor Suppressor , Genome, Viral , History, 20th Century , Retroviridae Infections/genetics , Tumor Virus Infections/genetics , Retroviridae , RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase
20.
Anon.
Medicina [B.Aires] ; 57(supl.2): 3-18, 1997.
Article in Spanish | BINACIS | ID: bin-7224

ABSTRACT

The discovery of RNA oncoviruses dates back to 1911 when Rous isolated the avian virus which is the cause of the sarcoma which bears his name and to 1936 when Bittner related the "milk factor" to the development of murine mammary cancer. During the 50s, the successive descriptions of virus-induced sarcoma-leukemias in mice led to the oncogene theory and gradually to the postulation of a viral origin of cancer. The discovery of the reverse transcriptase in 1970 led to the establishment of the Retroviridae family including both onco and lentiviruses. The decade of the 80s was marked by three fundamental discoveries which altered the concept of oncovirus: 1) oncogenes became established as part of the cellular genome converting retroviruses into occasional vectors of the oncogene; 2) as the T cell growth factor, interleukin-2, became available, the first human oncovirus, HTLV-I, was isolated and proved to be the cause of adult T cell leukemia; 3) HIV was isolated and classified as a lentivirus and as the cause of AIDS. A few years later the antioncogenes were discovered. Both oncogenes and anti-oncogenes were found to collaborate in the cell cycle, maintaining an equilibrium between proliferation and apoptosis. Today the viral theory has been replaced by the gene theory of cancer which postulates that neoplastic transformation is the result of a cascade of events which include uncorrected DNA errors, blocking of apoptosis, activation of oncogenes and deletion of antioncogenes. At the present time, the intriguing question for retrovirologists is the role played by endogenous retroviruses which in man occupy up to 0.1 of the cellular genome.(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Mice , Retroviridae , Tumor Virus Infections/history , Apoptosis , Genes, Tumor Suppressor , Genome, Viral , History, 20th Century , RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase , Retroviridae/classification , Retroviridae/genetics , Retroviridae/growth & development , Retroviridae Infections/genetics , Tumor Virus Infections/genetics
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...