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Jan. 19, 2010
Abstract
The human retrovirus XMRV (xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus) is associated
with prostate cancer, but a causal relationship has not been established. Here, we have
used cultured fibroblast and epithelial cell lines to test the hypothesis that XMRV might
have direct transforming activity but found only rare transformation events, suggestive of
indirect transformation, even when the target cells expressed the human Xpr1 cell entry
receptor for XMRV.
Characterization of cells from three transformed foci showed that all were infected with
and produced XMRV, and one produced a highly active transforming virus, presumably
generated by recombination between XMRV and host cell nucleic acids. Given the sequence
similarity of XMRV to mink cell focus-forming (MCF) viruses and the enhanced leukemogenic
activity of the latter, we tested XMRV for related MCF-like cytopathic activities in
cultured mink cells but found none.
These results indicate that XMRV has no direct transforming activity but can activate
endogenous oncogenes, resulting in cell transformation. As part of these experiments, we
show that XMRV can infect and be produced at a high titer from human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma
cells that express TRIM5alpha (Ref1), showing that XMRV is resistant to TRIM5alpha
restriction.
In addition, XMRV poorly infects NIH 3T3 cells expressing human Xpr1 but relatively
efficiently infects BALB 3T3 cells expressing human Xpr1, showing that XMRV is a B-tropic
virus and that its infectivity is regulated by the Fv1 mouse locus.
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