P20

Publication date: November 2015 Source:European Journal of Cancer Supplements, Volume 13, Issue 1 Author(s): V. Gurtsevitch, L. Yakovleva, L. Scherback, E. Goncharova, K. Smirnova, N. Senyuta The Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) represents an etiological agent for a number of human benign and malignant tumors. One of the EBV encoded proteins, the latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1), is involved in activation of many signaling pathways and transcription factors leading EBV infected cells to immortalization and transformation. It’s well known that almost all worlds’ population is infected with EBV. As usually, infection occurs during early childhood without serious consequences for infected people. At the same time a secondary infection by additional EBV strain(s) occurs quite often. During the in vitro cultivation of peripheral blood lymphocyte from persons infected with multiple strains of the virus, only one of them having LMP1 oncogene with highest transforming potential becomes dominant while the others are eliminated. To figure out whether pattern of LMP1 expressions reflects the origin of EBV strains, six cell lines from patients with tumors, associated and not-associated with the virus and healthy individuals were established. The nucleotide and deductive amino acid (a.a.) sequences of LMP1 isolates tested were analyzed and compared with those of LMP1 isolates obtained from eight cell lines of African and Japanese EBV-associated Burkitt’s lymphomas (BL) ori...
Source: European Journal of Cancer Supplements - Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research