Journal article
An epstein-barr virus anti-apoptotic protein constitutively expressed in transformed cells and implicated in burkitt lymphomagenesis: The Wp/BHRF1 link
GL Kelly, HM Long, J Stylianou, WA Thomas, A Leese, AI Bell, GW Bornkamm, J Mautner, AB Rickinson, M Rowe
Plos Pathogens | Published : 2009
Abstract
Two factors contribute to Burkitt lymphoma (BL) pathogenesis, a chromosomal translocation leading to c-myc oncogene deregulation and infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Although the virus has B cell growth-transforming ability, this may not relate to its role in BL since many of the transforming proteins are not expressed in the tumor. Mounting evidence supports an alternative role, whereby EBV counteracts the high apoptotic sensitivity inherent to the c-myc-driven growth program. In that regard, a subset of BLs carry virus mutants in a novel form of latent infection that provides unusually strong resistance to apoptosis. Uniquely, these virus mutants use Wp (a viral promoter normally a..
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Awarded by Cancer Research UK
Awarded by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was funded by grants to ABR, MR, and AIB from Cancer Research UK (C910/A8829, www. cancerresearchuk. org) and to JM and GWB from Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB455, http:// www. dfg. de). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.