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The E6 and E7 genes of the human papillomavirus type 16 together are necessary and sufficient for transformation of primary human keratinocytes
1.3K
Citations
42
References
1989
Year
Terminal DifferentiationE7 GenesPrimary Human KeratinocytesHuman Papillomavirus VaccinesImmunologyPathologyVirologyMolecular PathologyGene VectorDermatologyGene ExpressionMedicineCell BiologyVirus GeneViral OncologyCancer-associated Virus
Early HPV16 genes responsible for transforming primary keratinocytes have been identified. Both E6 and E7 are required for keratinocyte immortalization; mutations in either gene abolish transformation, other viral genes have no effect, and co‑expression of E6 and E7 from a beta‑actin promoter is sufficient to induce transformation.
The early human papillomavirus type 16 genes that directly participate in the in vitro transformation of primary human keratinocytes have been defined. In the context of the full viral genome, mutations in either the E6 or E7 open reading frame completely abrogated transformation of these cells. Mutations in the E1, E2, and E2-E4 open reading frames, on the other hand, had no effect. Thus, both the full-length E6 and E7 genes were required for the induction of keratinocyte immortalization and resistance to terminal differentiation. The E6 and E7 genes expressed together from the human beta-actin promoter were sufficient for this transformation; mutation of either gene in the context of this recombinant plasmid eliminated the ability to induce stable differentiation-resistant transformants.
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