Clonal integration of a polyomavirus in human Merkel cell carcinoma

H Feng, M Shuda, Y Chang, PS Moore - Science, 2008 - science.org
Science, 2008science.org
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare but aggressive human skin cancer that typically
affects elderly and immunosuppressed individuals, a feature suggestive of an infectious
origin. We studied MCC samples by digital transcriptome subtraction and detected a fusion
transcript between a previously undescribed virus T antigen and a human receptor tyrosine
phosphatase. Further investigation led to identification and sequence analysis of the 5387–
base-pair genome of a previously unknown polyomavirus that we call Merkel cell …
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare but aggressive human skin cancer that typically affects elderly and immunosuppressed individuals, a feature suggestive of an infectious origin. We studied MCC samples by digital transcriptome subtraction and detected a fusion transcript between a previously undescribed virus T antigen and a human receptor tyrosine phosphatase. Further investigation led to identification and sequence analysis of the 5387–base-pair genome of a previously unknown polyomavirus that we call Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV or MCPyV). MCV sequences were detected in 8 of 10 (80%) MCC tumors but only 5 of 59 (8%) control tissues from various body sites and 4 of 25 (16%) control skin tissues. In six of eight MCV-positive MCCs, viral DNA was integrated within the tumor genome in a clonal pattern, suggesting that MCV infection and integration preceded clonal expansion of the tumor cells. Thus, MCV may be a contributing factor in the pathogenesis of MCC.
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