Litcius/Paper detail

HTLV‐1 persistent infection and ATLL oncogenesis

Xiaorui Zuo, Ruoning Zhou, Sikai Yang, Guangyong Ma

2022Journal of Medical Virology27 citationsDOI

Abstract

Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) is an oncogenic retrovirus; whereas HTLV-1 mainly persists in the infected host cell as a provirus, it also causes a malignancy called adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL) in about 5% of infection. HTLV-1 replication is in most cases silent in vivo and viral de novo infection rarely occurs; HTLV-1 rather relies on clonal proliferation of infected T cells for viral propagation as it multiplies the number of the provirus copies. It is mechanistically elusive how leukemic clones emerge during the course of HTLV-1 infection in vivo and eventually cause the onset of ATLL. This review summarizes our current understanding of HTLV-1 persistence and oncogenesis, with the incorporation of recent cutting-edge discoveries obtained by high-throughput sequencing.

Topics & Concepts

ProvirusVirologyRetrovirusBiologyCarcinogenesisLeukemiaHuman T-lymphotropic virus 1VirusViral replicationT-cell leukemiaImmunologyCancerGeneticsGeneGenomeT-cell and Retrovirus StudiesAnimal Disease Management and EpidemiologyVector-Borne Animal Diseases