Viruses integrate into host DNA to replicate, but exactly where they insert themselves has become a topic of increasing importance. This is of special concern when integration is near an oncogene that may lead to uncontrolled, cancerous cell growth.

Now, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have completed the first whole-genome survey of where three commonly used retroviruses integrate into human DNA. The team, led by Frederic Bushman, PhD, Professor of Microbiology, compared vectors derived from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), murine leukemia virus (MLV), and avian sarcoma-leukosis virus (ASLV). They found that HIV integrated near active genes; MLV near points on the chromosome where protein translation starts (which confirms earlier work by another lab); and ASLV integrated more randomly throughout the entire genome. That each studied virus preferred a unique integration pattern or site suggests that viruses home in on certain chromosomal features for inserting themselves within the genome. This work appears in the August 17 issue of PLoS Biology, a new open-access journal.

There ™s a picture forming of where different retroviruses integrate in human cells, and it seems to be quite different from virus to virus, which is not something anyone would have ever suspected, says Bushman. We can only speculate as to the mechanism at present, but one attractive idea is that retroviral-integration complexes bind to cellular DNA binding proteins attached to specific locations on chromosomes. For HIV, integrating into active genes may help promote efficient viral gene expression. The reason for the choice of target is less clear in other retroviruses.

These findings are important for devising safer human gene-therapy vehicles. From studies in yeast, the researchers speculate that there is a system of biochemical recognition between proteins bound on human chromosomes and viral proteins, which helps guide integration, and that specific recognition seems to differ from virus to virus. There ™s a prospect of modulating or engineering that kind of system, once we understand it better to direct integration to different locations, comments Bushman.

These findings can also help researchers understand how HIV enters cells in order to devise drugs to block that entry. If there ™s a key interaction required for growth of a virus, then that would be a target to inhibit, says Bushman. HIV needs three enzymes “ reverse transcriptase, protease, and integrase “ to complete a full replication cycle. AZT and protease inhibitors stop activity of the first two, respectively, and the last one left to target is integrase, the object of a new AIDS drug recently tested in rhesus monkeys. If there is a targeting factor ™ required for efficient replication, then blocking its function might obstruct viral replication, says Bushman. The clearest way forward is to inhibit the catalytic activity of the integrase protein and some of our future work is geared toward that.

These are still early days in harnessing knowledge about viral integration in humans to make safer and more effective gene therapies, let alone new drugs against HIV. To that end, new information on targeting integration is likely to help guide design of better therapy, say the researchers.

Other members of the research team included Penn colleagues Rick S. Mitchell, Brett F.Beitzel, and Astrid R.W. Schroder, as well as Paul P. Shinn, Huaming Chen, and Joe R. Ecker from The Salk Institute and Charles C. Berry from the University of California at San Diego School of Medicine. This research was funded by the James B. Pendleton Charitable Trust, the Berger Foundation, and the National Institutes of Health.

uphs.upenn

Tag Cloud

Accutane kaufen Ohne Rezept
Aciphex kaufen Ohne Rezept
Actos kaufen Ohne Rezept
Aldactone kaufen Ohne Rezept
Allegra kaufen Ohne Rezept
Amoxicillin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Antabuse kaufen Ohne Rezept
Arcoxia kaufen Ohne Rezept
Atrovent kaufen Ohne Rezept
Bactrim kaufen Ohne Rezept
Benicar kaufen Ohne Rezept
Biaxin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Buspar kaufen Ohne Rezept
Cardura kaufen Ohne Rezept
Cipro kaufen Ohne Rezept
Cleocin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Clonidine kaufen Ohne Rezept
Coreg kaufen Ohne Rezept
Crestor kaufen Ohne Rezept
Differin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Effexor kaufen Ohne Rezept
Elavil kaufen Ohne Rezept
Erythromycin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Evista kaufen Ohne Rezept
Femara kaufen Ohne Rezept
Flagyl kaufen Ohne Rezept
Fosamax kaufen Ohne Rezept
Glucophage kaufen Ohne Rezept
Hydrochlorothiazide kaufen Ohne Rezept
Imitrex kaufen Ohne Rezept
Inderal kaufen Ohne Rezept
Lamisil kaufen Ohne Rezept
Lasix kaufen Ohne Rezept
Levaquin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Lotensin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Maxalt kaufen Ohne Rezept
Micardis kaufen Ohne Rezept
Misoprostol kaufen Ohne Rezept
Naltrexone kaufen Ohne Rezept
Nexium kaufen Ohne Rezept
Nolvadex kaufen Ohne Rezept
Norvasc kaufen Ohne Rezept
Ortho Tri-Cyclen kaufen Ohne Rezept
Parlodel kaufen Ohne Rezept
Plavix kaufen Ohne Rezept
Premarin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Priligy kaufen Ohne Rezept
Propecia kaufen Ohne Rezept
Retin-A kaufen Ohne Rezept
Robaxin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Skelaxin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Suprax kaufen Ohne Rezept
Synthroid kaufen Ohne Rezept
Trileptal kaufen Ohne Rezept
Valtrex kaufen Ohne Rezept
Ventolin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Xenical kaufen Ohne Rezept
Yasmin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Zithromax kaufen Ohne Rezept
Zocor kaufen Ohne Rezept
Zyban kaufen Ohne Rezept
Zyvox kaufen Ohne Rezept