Litcius/Paper detail

Virus-induced host genomic remodeling dysregulates gene expression, triggering tumorigenesis

Weixia Dong, Huiqin Wang, Menghui Li, Ping Li, Shaoping Ji

2024Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Virus-induced genomic remodeling and altered gene expression contribute significantly to cancer development. Some oncogenic viruses such as Human papillomavirus (HPV) specifically trigger certain cancers by integrating into the host's DNA, disrupting gene regulation linked to cell growth and migration. The effect can be through direct integration of viral genomes into the host genome or through indirect modulation of host cell pathways/proteins by viral proteins. Viral proteins also disrupt key cellular processes like apoptosis and DNA repair by interacting with host molecules, affecting signaling pathways. These disruptions lead to mutation accumulation and tumorigenesis. This review focuses on recent studies exploring virus-mediated genomic structure, altered gene expression, and epigenetic modifications in tumorigenesis.

Topics & Concepts

CarcinogenesisBiologyEpigeneticsGeneCell biologyGene expressionGenomeRegulation of gene expressionGenome instabilityGeneticsDNA damageDNARNA modifications and cancerVirus-based gene therapy researchinterferon and immune responses