Longworth Michelle S, Laimins Laimonis A
Department of Microbiology-Immunology, The Fineberg Medical School, Northwestern University, 303 E. Chicago Ave., Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
Microbiol Mol Biol Rev. 2004 Jun;68(2):362-72. doi: 10.1128/MMBR.68.2.362-372.2004.
Human papillomaviruses (HPV) are the etiological agents of cervical and other anogenital malignancies. Over 100 different types of HPVs have been identified to date, and all target epithelial tissues for infection. One-third of HPV types specifically infect the genital tract, and a subset of these are the causative agents of anogenital cancers. Other HPV types that infect the genital tract induce benign hyperproliferative lesions or genital warts. The productive life cycle of HPVs is linked to epithelial differentiation. Papillomaviruses are thought to infect cells in the basal layer of stratified epithelia and establish their genomes as multicopy nuclear episomes. In these cells, viral DNA is replicated along with cellular chromosomes. Following cell division, one of the daughter cells migrates away from the basal layer and undergoes differentiation. In highly differentiated suprabasal cells, vegetative viral replication and late-gene expression are activated, resulting in the generation of progeny virions. Since virion production is restricted to differentiated cells, infected basal cells can persist for up to several decades or until the immune system clears the infection. The E6 and E7 genes encode viral oncoproteins that target Rb and p53, respectively. During the viral life cycle, these proteins facilitate stable maintenance of episomes and stimulate differentiated cells to reenter the S phase. The E1 and E2 proteins act as origin recognition factors as well as regulators of early viral transcription. The functions of the E5 and E1--E4 proteins are still largely unknown, but these proteins have been implicated in modulating late viral functions. The L1 and L2 proteins form icosahedral capsids for progeny virion generation. The characterization of the cellular targets of these viral proteins and the mechanisms regulating the differentiation-dependent viral life cycle remain active areas for the study of these important human pathogens.
人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)是宫颈癌和其他肛门生殖器恶性肿瘤的病原体。迄今为止,已鉴定出100多种不同类型的HPV,它们均靶向上皮组织进行感染。三分之一的HPV类型特异性感染生殖道,其中一部分是肛门生殖器癌的病原体。其他感染生殖道的HPV类型会引发良性增生性病变或生殖器疣。HPV的增殖性生命周期与上皮细胞分化相关。乳头瘤病毒被认为感染复层上皮基底层的细胞,并将其基因组建立为多拷贝核游离型。在这些细胞中,病毒DNA与细胞染色体一起复制。细胞分裂后,其中一个子细胞从基底层迁移并开始分化。在高度分化的基底层以上细胞中,病毒的营养复制和晚期基因表达被激活,从而产生子代病毒颗粒。由于病毒颗粒的产生仅限于分化细胞,受感染的基底层细胞可以持续存在数十年,直到免疫系统清除感染。E6和E7基因分别编码靶向Rb和p53的病毒癌蛋白。在病毒生命周期中,这些蛋白有助于游离型的稳定维持,并刺激分化细胞重新进入S期。E1和E2蛋白作为起始识别因子以及早期病毒转录的调节因子。E5和E1-E4蛋白的功能在很大程度上仍然未知,但这些蛋白已被认为与调节病毒晚期功能有关。L1和L2蛋白形成二十面体衣壳以产生子代病毒颗粒。这些病毒蛋白的细胞靶点特征以及调节依赖分化的病毒生命周期的机制仍然是这些重要人类病原体研究的活跃领域。