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1.
The infectious cycle of human papillomavirus type 1 (HPV1) is accompanied by abundant expression of the full-length E1;E4 protein (17-kDa) and smaller E4 polypeptides (16-, 11-, and 10-kDa) that arise by sequential loss of N-terminal E1;E4 sequences. HPV1 E4 inhibits G(2)-to-M transition of the cell cycle. Here, we show that HPV1 E4 proteins mediate inhibition of cell division by more than one mechanism. Cells arrested by coexpression of E1;E4 (E4-17K) and a truncated protein equivalent to the 16-kDa species (E4-16K) contain inactive cyclin B1-cdk1 complexes. Inactivation of cdk1 is through inhibitory Tyr(15) phosphorylation, with cells containing elevated levels of Wee1, the kinase responsible for inhibitory cdk1 phosphorylation. Consistent with these findings, overexpression of Wee1 enhanced the extent to which E4-17K/16K-expressing cells arrest in G(2), indicating that maintenance of Wee1 activity is necessary for inhibition of cell division induced by coexpression of the two E4 proteins. Moreover, we have determined that depletion of Wee1 by small interfering RNA (siRNA) alleviates the G(2) block imposed by E4-17K/16K. In contrast however, maintenance of Wee1 activity is not necessary for G(2)-to-M inhibition mediated by E4-16K alone, as overexpression or depletion of Wee1 does not influence the G(2) arrest function of E4-16K. Cells arrested by E4-16K expression contain low levels of active cyclin B1-cdk1 complexes. We hypothesize that differential expression of HPV1 E4 proteins during the viral life cycle determines the host cell cycle status. Different mechanisms of inhibition of G(2)-to-M transition reinforce the supposition that distinct E4 functions are important for HPV replication.  相似文献   

2.
Human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) is the most common cause of cervical carcinoma. Cervical cancer develops from low-grade lesions that support the productive stages of the virus life cycle. The 16E1 wedge E4 protein is abundantly expressed in such lesions and can be detected in cells supporting vegetative viral genome amplification. Using an inducible mammalian expression system, we have shown that 16E1 wedge E4 arrests HeLa cervical epithelial cells in G(2). 16E1 wedge E4 also caused a G(2) arrest in SiHa, Saos-2 and Saccharomyces pombe cells and, as with HeLa cells, was found in the cytoplasm. However, whereas 16E1 wedge E4 is found on the keratin networks in HeLa and SiHa cells, in Saos-2 and S. pombe cells that lack keratins, 16E1 wedge E4 had a punctate distribution. Mutagenesis studies revealed a proline-rich region between amino acids 17 and 45 of 16E1 wedge E4 to be important for arrest. This region, which we have termed the "arrest domain," contains a putative nuclear localization signal, a cyclin-binding motif, and a single cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) phosphorylation site. A single point mutation in the putative Cdk phosphorylation site (T23A) abolished 16E1 wedge E4-mediated G(2) arrest. Arrest did not involve proteins regulating the phosphorylation state of Cdc2 and does not appear to involve the activation of the DNA damage or incomplete replication checkpoint. G(2) arrest was also mediated by the E1 wedge E4 protein of HPV11, a low-risk mucosal HPV type that also causes cervical lesions. The E1 wedge E4 protein of HPV1, which is more distantly related to that of HPV16, did not cause G(2) arrest. We conclude that, like other papillomavirus proteins, 16E1 wedge E4 affects cell cycle progression and that it targets a conserved component of the cell cycle machinery.  相似文献   

3.
Productive infections by human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are restricted to nondividing, differentiated keratinocytes. HPV early proteins E6 and E7 deregulate cell cycle progression and activate the host cell DNA replication machinery in these cells, changes essential for virus synthesis. Productive virus replication is accompanied by abundant expression of the HPV E4 protein. Expression of HPV1 E4 in cells is known to activate cell cycle checkpoints, inhibiting G(2)-to-M transition of the cell cycle and also suppressing entry of cells into S phase. We report here that the HPV1 E4 protein, in the presence of a soluble form of the replication-licensing factor (RLF) Cdc6, inhibits initiation of cellular DNA replication in a mammalian cell-free DNA replication system. Chromatin-binding studies show that E4 blocks replication initiation in vitro by preventing loading of the RLFs Mcm2 and Mcm7 onto chromatin. HPV1 E4-mediated replication inhibition in vitro and suppression of entry of HPV1 E4-expressing cells into S phase are both abrogated upon alanine replacement of arginine 45 in the full-length E4 protein (E1;E4), implying that these two HPV1 E4 functions are linked. We hypothesize that HPV1 E4 inhibits competing host cell DNA synthesis in replication-activated suprabasal keratinocytes by suppressing licensing of cellular replication origins, thus modifying the phenotype of the infected cell in favor of viral genome amplification.  相似文献   

4.
Cells arrest in the G1 or G0 phase of the cell cycle in response to a variety of negative growth signals that induce arrest by different molecular pathways. The ability of human papillomavirus (HPV) oncogenes to bypass these signals and allow cells to progress into the S phase probably contributes to the neoplastic potential of the virus. The E7 protein of HPV-16 was able to disrupt the response of epithelial cells to three different negative growth arrest signals: quiescence imposed upon suprabasal epithelial cells, G1 arrest induced by DNA damage, and inhibition of DNA synthesis caused by treatment with transforming growth factor beta. The same set of mutated E7 proteins was able to abrogate all three growth arrest signals. Mutant proteins that failed to abrogate growth arrest signals were transformation deficient and included E7 proteins that bound retinoblastoma protein in vitro. In contrast, HPV-16 E6 was able to bypass only DNA damage-induced G1 arrest, not suprabasal quiescence or transforming growth factor beta-induced arrest. The E6 and E7 proteins from the low-risk virus HPV-6 were not able to bypass any of the growth arrest signals.  相似文献   

5.
The life cycle of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) is tightly linked to the differentiation program of the host's stratified epithelia that it infects. E1(circumflex)E4 is a viral protein that has been ascribed multiple biochemical properties of potential biological relevance to the viral life cycle. To identify the role(s) of the viral E1(circumflex)E4 protein in the HPV life cycle, we characterized the properties of HPV type 16 (HPV16) genomes harboring mutations in the E4 gene in NIKS cells, a spontaneously immortalized keratinocyte cell line that when grown in organotypic raft cultures supports the HPV life cycle. We learned that E1(circumflex)E4 contributes to the replication of the viral plasmid genome as a nuclear plasmid in basal cells, in which we also found E1(circumflex)E4 protein to be expressed at low levels. In the suprabasal compartment of organotypic raft cultures harboring E1(circumflex)E4 mutant HPV16 genomes there were alterations in the frequency of suprabasal cells supporting DNA synthesis, the levels of viral DNA amplification, and the degree to which the virus perturbs differentiation. Interestingly, the comparison of the phenotypes of various mutations in E4 indicated that the E1(circumflex)E4 protein-encoding requirements for these various processes differed. These data support the hypothesis that E1(circumflex)E4 is a multifunctional protein and that the different properties of E1(circumflex)E4 contribute to different processes in both the early and late stages of the virus life cycle.  相似文献   

6.
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We have previously demonstrated that human papillomavirus type 1 (HPV 1) and 16 (HPV 16) E4 proteins form cytoplasmic filamentous networks which specifically colocalize with cytokeratin intermediate-filament (IF) networks when expressed in simian virus 40-transformed keratinocytes. The HPV 16 (but not the HPV 1) E4 protein induced the collapse of the cytokeratin networks. (S. Roberts, I. Ashmole, G. D. Johnson, J. W. Kreider, and P. H. Gallimore, Virology 197:176-187, 1993). The mode of interaction of E4 with the cytokeratin IFs is unknown. To identify E4 sequences important in mediating this interaction, we have constructed a large panel of mutant HPV (primarily HPV 1) E4 proteins and expressed them by using the same simian virus 40-epithelial expression system. Mutation of HPV 1 E4 residues 10 to 14 (LLGLL) abrogated the formation of cytoplasmic filamentous networks. This sequence corresponds to a conserved motif, LLXLL, found at the N terminus of other E4 proteins, and similar results were obtained on deletion of the HPV 16 motif, LLKLL (residues 12 to 16). Our findings indicate that this conserved motif is likely to play a central role in the association between E4 and the cytokeratins. An HPV 1 E4 mutant protein containing a deletion of residues 110 to 115 induced the collapse of the cytokeratin IFs in a manner analogous to the HPV 16 E4 protein. The sequence deleted, DLDDFC, is highly conserved between cutaneous E4 proteins. HPV 1 E4 residues 42 to 80, which are rich in charged amino acids, appeared to be important in the cytoplasmic localization of E4. In addition, we have mapped the N-terminal residues of HPV 1 E4 16-kDa and 10/11-kDa polypeptides expressed by using the baculovirus system and shown that they begin at tyrosine 16 and alanine 59, respectively. Similar-sized E4 proteins are also found in vivo. N-terminal deletion proteins, which closely resemble the 16-kDa and 10/11-kDa species, expressed in keratinocytes were both cytoplasmic and nuclear but did not form cytoplasmic filamentous networks. These findings support the postulate that N-terminal proteolytic processing of the E1-- E4 protein may modulate its function in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Helt AM  Funk JO  Galloway DA 《Journal of virology》2002,76(20):10559-10568
The human papillomavirus (HPV) type 16 E7 oncoprotein must inactivate the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor (Rb) pathway to bypass G(1) arrest. However, E7 C-terminal mutants that were able to inactivate Rb were unable to bypass DNA damage-induced G(1) arrest and keratinocyte senescence, suggesting that the E7 C terminus may target additional G(1) regulators. The E7 C-terminal mutant proteins E7 CVQ68-70AAA and E7 Delta79-83 (deletion of positions 79 through 83) were further tested in several models of cell cycle arrest associated with elevated levels of p21. C-terminal mutations rendered E7 unable to induce S phase and endoreduplication in differentiated keratinocytes and rendered it less efficient in delaying senescence of human mammary epithelial cells. Interestingly, when cell cycle arrest was induced with a peptide form of p21, the E7 C-terminal mutants were deficient in overcoming arrest, whereas a mutant defective in Rb binding was competent in inhibiting G(1) arrest. These results suggest that the inactivation of both p21 and Rb by E7 contributes to subversion of cell cycle control in normal human epithelia but that neither p21 nor Rb inactivation alone is sufficient.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) can cause cervical cancer. Expression of the viral E1 E4 protein is lost during malignant progression, but in premalignant lesions, E1 E4 is abundant in cells supporting viral DNA amplification. Expression of 16E1 E4 in cell culture causes G2 cell cycle arrest. Here we show that unlike many other G2 arrest mechanisms, 16E1 E4 does not inhibit the kinase activity of the Cdk1/cyclin B1 complex. Instead, 16E1 E4 uses a novel mechanism in which it sequesters Cdk1/cyclin B1 onto the cytokeratin network. This prevents the accumulation of active Cdk1/cyclin B1 complexes in the nucleus and hence prevents mitosis. A mutant 16E1 E4 (T22A, T23A) which does not bind cyclin B1 or alter its intracellular location fails to induce G2 arrest. The significance of these results is highlighted by the observation that in lesions induced by HPV16, there is evidence for Cdk1/cyclin B1 activity on the keratins of 16E1 E4-expressing cells. We hypothesize that E1 E4-induced G2 arrest may play a role in creating an environment optimal for viral DNA replication and that loss of E1 E4 expression may contribute to malignant progression.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is necessary but not sufficient for cervical carcinogenesis. Genomic instability caused by HPV allows cells to acquire additional mutations required for malignant transformation. Genomic instability in the form of polyploidy has been demonstrated to play an important role in cervical carcinogenesis. We have recently found that HPV-16 E7 oncogene induces polyploidy in response to DNA damage; however, the mechanism is not known. Here we present evidence demonstrating that HPV-16 E7-expressing cells have an intact G2 checkpoint. Upon DNA damage, HPV-16 E7-expressing cells arrest at the G2 checkpoint and then undergo rereplication, a process of successive rounds of host DNA replication without entering mitosis. Interestingly, the DNA replication initiation factor Cdt1, whose uncontrolled expression induces rereplication in human cancer cells, is upregulated in E7-expressing cells. Moreover, downregulation of Cdt1 impairs the ability of E7 to induce rereplication. These results demonstrate an important role for Cdt1 in HPV E7-induced rereplication and shed light on mechanisms by which HPV induces genomic instability.  相似文献   

14.
Human papillomavirus type 1 (HPV1) E4 protein is associated with cytoplasmic and nuclear inclusions in productively infected keratinocytes. Here we have used transient expression of HPV1 E4 (also known as E1E4) protein in keratinocytes to reproduce formation of E4 inclusions. Immunofluorescence analysis showed that progressive formation of inclusions correlated with diminished colocalization between E4 and keratin intermediate filaments (IFs). Our results support a model in which the HPV1 E4-keratin IF association is transient, occurring only at an early stage of inclusion formation. We also demonstrate that E4 induces relocation of the promyelocytic leukemia protein (PML) from multiple intranuclear speckles (ND10 bodies) to the periphery of nuclear E4 inclusions and that this activity is specific to full-length E4 protein. Analysis of HPV1-induced warts demonstrated that nuclear PML-E4 inclusions were present in productively infected keratinocytes, indicating that reorganization of PML occurs during the virus's replication cycle. It has been suggested that ND10 bodies are the sites for papillomavirus genome replication and virion assembly. Our finding that E4 induces reorganization of ND10 bodies in vitro and in vivo is further strong evidence that these domains play an important role in the papillomavirus life cycle. This study indicates that HPV1 is analogous to other DNA viruses that disrupt or reorganize ND10 domains, possibly to increase efficiency of virus infection. We hypothesize that HPV1 E4-induced reorganization of PML is necessary for efficient replication of the virus during the virus-producing phase.  相似文献   

15.
Functional p53 protein is associated with the ability of cells to arrest in G1 after DNA damage. The E6 protein of cancer-associated human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) binds to p53 and targets its degradation through the ubiquitin pathway. To determine whether the ability of E6 to interact with p53 leads to a disruption of cell cycle control, mutated E6 proteins were tested for p53 binding and p53 degradation targeting in vitro, the ability to reduce intracellular p53 levels in vivo, and the ability to abrogate actinomycin D-induced growth arrest in human keratinocytes. Mutations scattered throughout the amino terminus, either zinc finger or the central region but not the carboxy terminus, severely reduced the ability of E6 to interact with p53. Expression of HPV-16 E6 or mutated E6 proteins that bound and targeted p53 for degradation in vitro sharply reduced the level of intracellular p53 induced by actinomycin D in human keratinocytes. A perfect correlation between the ability of E6 proteins to reduce the level of intracellular p53 and their ability to block actinomycin D-induced cellular growth arrest was observed. These results suggest that interaction with p53 is important for the ability of HPV E6 proteins to circumvent growth arrest.  相似文献   

16.
The productive program of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) in epithelia is tightly linked to squamous differentiation. The E7 proteins of high-risk HPV genotypes efficiently inactivate the pRB family of proteins that control the cell cycle, triggering S phase in suprabasal keratinocytes. This ability has until now not been demonstrated for the low-risk HPV-6 or HPV-11 E7 proteins. An inducible system in which HPV-16 E7 is fused to the ligand binding domain of the human estrogen receptor (ER) was described by Smith-McCune et al. (K. Smith-McCune, D. Kalman, C. Robbins, S. Shivakumar, L. Yuschenkoff, and J. M. Bishop, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96:6999-7004, 1999). In the absence of hormone, E7ER is cytoplasmic, and upon addition of 17beta-estradiol, it translocates to the nucleus. Using organotypic epithelial raft cultures developed from primary human keratinocytes, we show that 16E7ER promotes either S-phase reentry or p21cip1 accumulation in differentiated keratinocytes in a stochastic manner as early as 6 h postinduction with 17beta-estradiol. A vector expressing the ER moiety alone had no effect. These observations prove unequivocally that the E7 protein drives S-phase reentry in postmitotic, differentiated keratinocytes rather than preventing S-phase exit while the cells ascend through the epithelium. HPV-11 E7ER and, much less efficiently, HPV-6 E7ER also promoted S-phase reentry by differentiated cells upon exposure to 17beta-estradiol. S-phase induction required the consensus pRB binding motif. We propose that the elevated nuclear levels of the low-risk HPV E7 protein afforded by the inducible system account for the positive results. These observations are entirely consistent with the fact that low-risk HPV genotypes replicate in the differentiated strata in patient specimens, as do the high-risk HPVs.  相似文献   

17.
Monolayer cultures of human foreskin and ectocervical epithelial cells were infected with retroviral vectors expressing HPV16 oncogenes, selected for G418 resistance, and cultured organotypically so that they reformed the fully differentiated, stratified squamous tissues from which they were originally derived. Expression of HPV16 E7 prevented cell cycle withdrawal in the suprabasal layers of these stratified cultures but had no effect on terminal differentiation. Cultures expressing E7 alone and those coexpressing E6 and E7 were identical in terms of suprabasal proliferation and terminal differentiation, but they differed in expression of the endogenous tumor suppressor protein p53. Immunohistochemically detectable p53 protein localized to the proliferative compartment in normal and E7-containing cultures but was undetectable in those cultures which coexpressed E6 and E7. This result suggests that E7-induced suprabasal proliferation is independent of the steady-state level of p53.  相似文献   

18.
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20.
The human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) E7 is a major viral oncoprotein that is phosphorylated by casein kinase II (CKII). Two S100 family calcium-binding proteins, macrophage inhibitory-related factor protein 8 (MRP-8) and MRP-14, form a protein complex, MRP-8/14, that inactivates CKII. The MRP-8/14 protein complex may inhibit CKII-mediated E7 phosphorylation and therefore may alter its interaction with cellular ligands and reduce E7 oncogenic activity. We examined the inhibitory effect of the MRP-8/14 complex on CKII activity and HPV16 E7 phosphorylation. We have shown that CKII activity and HPV16 E7 phosphorylation were inhibited by uptake of exogenous MRP-8/14 and activation of endogenous MRP-8/14. MRP-8/14-mediated inhibition of E7 phosphorylation occurred at the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Analysis of MRP expression in primary keratinocytes and in HPV16- and 18-transformed cervical and foreskin epithelial cell lines showed that expression of MRP-8, MRP-14, and the MRP-8/14 complex was detected only in primary untransformed keratinocytes and not in the HPV-infected immortalized epithelial cells. CKII activity in HPV-immortalized keratinocytes was approximately fourfold higher than in HPV-negative primary keratinocytes. Treatment of HPV-positive immortalized epithelial cells with exogenous MRP-8/14 resulted in E7 hypophosphorylation and complete inhibition of cell growth within 2 weeks, compared with HPV-negative primary and immortalized HPV-negative cervical epithelial cells, which showed 25 and 40% growth inhibition, respectively. Together these results suggests that the MRP-8/14 protein complex in HPV-infected epithelial cells may play an important role in regulation of CKII-mediated E7 phosphorylation and inhibition of its oncogenic activity.  相似文献   

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