The long term goal of this program is to understand the biochemical mechanisms which underlie neoplastic transformation by papovaviruses. In particular, the application describes experiments (by Drs. T. Roberts, A. Smith, D. Livingston, and B. Schaffhausen) designed to decipher the mode of action of three major species of papovaviral transforming proteins - SV40 large T, polyoma middle t, and polyoma large T. In particular, emphasis will be placed on how these proteins function as perturbants of the action of known cellular oncogene and anti-oncogene products and how the resulting perturbations are converted into growth altering signals. In addition, there will be a systematic genetic analysis (by Dr. R. Garcea in collaboration with Dr. T. Benjamin) of the receptor binding function of the major viral capsid protein of polyoma, VP1. Specific receptor binding, is essential to the progression of natural infection, to the development of virus-induced tumors, and, most likely, to the appearance of a mitogenic response to viral infection. Nevertheless, little is known of how the virus interacts with its receptor or how this structure functions, once activated.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01CA050661-04
Application #
3094435
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (SRC (I2))
Project Start
1989-07-01
Project End
1994-05-31
Budget Start
1992-08-01
Budget End
1993-05-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1992
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
149617367
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02215
Becker, Jürgen C; Stang, Andreas; Hausen, Axel Zur et al. (2018) Epidemiology, biology and therapy of Merkel cell carcinoma: conclusions from the EU project IMMOMEC. Cancer Immunol Immunother 67:341-351
Becker, Jürgen C; Stang, Andreas; DeCaprio, James A et al. (2017) Merkel cell carcinoma. Nat Rev Dis Primers 3:17077
Denis, Deborah; Rouleau, Cecile; Schaffhausen, Brian S (2017) A Transformation-Defective Polyomavirus Middle T Antigen with a Novel Defect in PI3 Kinase Signaling. J Virol 91:
Starrett, Gabriel J; Marcelus, Christina; Cantalupo, Paul G et al. (2017) Merkel Cell Polyomavirus Exhibits Dominant Control of the Tumor Genome and Transcriptome in Virus-Associated Merkel Cell Carcinoma. MBio 8:
Cizmecioglu, Onur; Ni, Jing; Xie, Shaozhen et al. (2016) Rac1-mediated membrane raft localization of PI3K/p110? is required for its activation by GPCRs or PTEN loss. Elife 5:
Rouleau, Cecile; Pores Fernando, Arun T; Hwang, Justin H et al. (2016) Transformation by Polyomavirus Middle T Antigen Involves a Unique Bimodal Interaction with the Hippo Effector YAP. J Virol 90:7032-7045
Berrios, Christian; Jung, Joonil; Primi, Blake et al. (2015) Malawi polyomavirus is a prevalent human virus that interacts with known tumor suppressors. J Virol 89:857-62
Luo, Leo Y; Kim, Eejung; Cheung, Hiu Wing et al. (2015) The Tyrosine Kinase Adaptor Protein FRS2 Is Oncogenic and Amplified in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer. Mol Cancer Res 13:502-9
Hettmer, Simone; Schinzel, Anna C; Tchessalova, Daria et al. (2015) Functional genomic screening reveals asparagine dependence as a metabolic vulnerability in sarcoma. Elife 4:
White, Elizabeth A; Kramer, Rebecca E; Hwang, Justin H et al. (2015) Papillomavirus E7 oncoproteins share functions with polyomavirus small T antigens. J Virol 89:2857-65

Showing the most recent 10 out of 147 publications