Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Viral Oncology, Research Institute, Nagoya, Japan.
Abstract
Our discovery of human papillomavirus type 47 (HPV47) in benign lesions from a patient suffering from epidermodysplasia verruciformis prompted us to examine whether the viral DNA also resided in malignant lesions from the same patient. By using newly devised protocols for amplifying a group of epidermodysplasia verruciformis-associated HPV DNAs by PCR and differentially identifying them by reverse-phase dot blot hybridization, we demonstrated that HPV47 DNA, but not other HPV DNAs of the group, was abundant (about 10(3) copies per diploid amount of cell DNA) in DNAs prepared from three carcinomas. Using DNA from one of these carcinomas, we also confirmed that DNA of HPV5, HPV14, or HPV21, detected in significant amounts in DNAs from benign lesions from the patient, were present only in negligible amounts or not at all. The results suggest the involvement of HPV47 DNA in tumorigenesis. Furthermore, we demonstrated by the Southern technique that most, if not all, of the HPV47 DNA consists of either a unit (or a nongrossly deleted unit) length of the viral genome carrying no (or no gross) internal rearrangements or tandem repeats. This and other results obtained by this technique indicated that a considerable amount of the viral DNA resides as a circular monomer a unit length of the viral genome in carcinoma cells, while the remainder reside as catenanes, concatemers, or both. The concatemers were considered more likely to be replicated without integration into cellular DNA than to be integrated, because no bands for the corresponding fragments including integration sites were detected by treatment with restriction enzymes that would have produced such fragments.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
25 articles.
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