ID
Oncogene
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Oncogene
, Proto-oncogene, Retroviral Oncogene
See Also
Retrovirus
Definitions
Oncogene
Gene
that is normally involved in cell growth, but now mutated, and allowing for uncontrolled cancer growth
Oncogenes may be inherited, or acquired from environmental exposures (viruses, substances)
Oncogenes prefixed by -v, indicate a Retroviral Oncogene
Proto-oncogene
Proto-oncogene is a gene normally involved in cell growth regulation
Proto-oncogenes may mutate into Oncogenes and lead to the uncontrolled growth of cancer cells
Proto-oncogenes include cell proliferation stimulators (mitogens)
Growth factors (e.g. EGF, PDGF)
Protein
kinases
Signal transducers
Nuclear phosphoproteins
Transcription factors
Retroviral Oncogene of Acute Transforming
Virus
es
Retrovirus
(e.g. HTLV) transmits Oncogenes to host cells
Retroviral Oncogenes are associated with
Sarcoma
s and
Leukemia
s
First identified in birds and rodents
Pathophysiology
Mechanisms of Oncogene transmission
Acute Transforming
Virus
es
Retrovirus
(e.g. HTLV) transmits an intact Oncogene from its genome to host DNA
Oncongenes have sticky ends (single stranded overhanging DNA)
Retrovirus
es express an integrase enzyme that facilitates the Oncogene integration
Virus
es may "capture" Proto-oncogenes from hosts into their own genomes
Captured Proto-oncogenes may mutate over time with viral replication into Oncogenes
Defective Acute Transforming
Virus
es
Most acute transforming viruses are defective and rely on viral coinfection for replication
Oncogenes are very long RNA
Nucleotide
sequences
Acute transforming viruses with long Oncogenes lose the RNA needed for viral replication
Rous
Sarcoma
virus Oncogene (src) is an exception and is not defective
Src maintains a full Oncogene and its own viral replication RNA
Non-acute transforming viruses
Retrovirus
carries RNA coding for an activating sequence (instead of an intact Oncogene)
Activating sequence integrates into a Proto-oncogene, transforming it into an Oncogene
Types
Retroviral Oncogene Examples
Rous
Sarcoma
virus Oncogene (src)
Src phosphorylates tryrosine (a signaling
Protein
) at 10x normal rate, stimulating unchecked cell growth
Src is the first identified Oncogene, discovered in 1911 by Peyton Rous
Rous transmitted
Sarcoma
between chickens via injection of cell-less fluid
Avian
Erythroblast
osis virus Oncogenes (erbB, erbA)
ErbB mimics receptor
Tyrosine Kinase
ErbA acts as a
Thyroid Hormone
receptor
Avian
Sarcoma
Virus Oncogenes (16, 17, CT10)
Crk (modular signaling link, CT10)
Jun (AP1 transcriptional regulator, ASV17)
P13K
Lipid
kinase (ASV16)
References
Gladwin, Trattler and Mahan (2014) Clinical Microbiology, Medmaster, Fl, p. 266-7
Vogt (2012) Nat Rev Cancer 12(9):639-48 +PMID: 22898541 [PubMed]
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