Abstract

JC polyoma virus (JCPyV) is a ubiquitous polyoma virus that infects the individual to cause progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy and malignancies. Here, we found that T-antigen knockdown suppressed proliferation, glycolysis, mitochondrial respiration, migration, and invasion, and induced apoptosis and G2 arrest. The reverse was true for T-antigen overexpression, with overexpression of Akt, survivin, retinoblastoma protein, β-catenin, β-transducin repeat-containing protein (TRCP), and inhibitor of growth (ING)1, and the underexpression of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), phosphorylated (p)-mTOR, p-p38, Cyclin D1, p21, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), ING2, and ING4 in hepatocellular and pancreatic cancer cells and tissues. In lens tumor cells, T antigen transcriptionally targeted viral carcinogenesis, microRNAs in cancer, focal adhesion, p53, VEGF, phosphoinositide 3 kinase-Akt, and Forkhead box O signaling pathways, fructose and mannose metabolism, ribosome biosynthesis, and choline and pyrimidine metabolism. At a metabolomics level, it targeted protein digestion and absorption, aminoacryl-tRNA biosynthesis, biosynthesis of amino acids, and the AMPK signal pathway. At a proteomic level, it targeted ribosome biogenesis in eukaryotes, citrate cycle, carbon metabolism, protein digestion and absorption, aminoacryl-tRNA biosynthesis, extracellular-matrix-receptor interaction, and biosynthesis of amino acids. In lens tumor cells, T antigen might interact with various keratins, ribosomal proteins, apolipoproteins, G proteins, ubiquitin-related proteins, RPL19, β-catenin, β-TRCP, p53, and CCAAT-enhancer-binding proteins in lens tumor cells. T antigen induced a more aggressive phenotype in mouse and human cancer cells due to oncogene activation, inactivation of tumor suppressors, and disruption of metabolism, cell adhesion, and long noncoding RNA-microRNA-target axes.

Highlights

  • The JC polyoma virus (JCPyV) belongs to the human DNA polyoma virus family together with BK and SV40 polyoma viruses

  • They were classified into molecular function, cellular component, and biological process according to Gene Ontology analysis

  • We overexpressed T antigen in hepatocellular and pancreatic cancer cells, which promoted proliferation, migration, and invasion. This suggests that T antigen can insert itself into genomic DNA to express an oncoprotein, which is responsible for the aggressiveness of cellular phenotypes

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Summary

Introduction

The JC polyoma virus (JCPyV) belongs to the human DNA polyoma virus family together with BK and SV40 polyoma viruses. It is considered as an etiologic agent of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) and is a neurotropic virus. The replication of JCPyV is regulated by transcription factors (e.g., Jun, Sp1, nuclear factor-1, GF-1, Smbp-2, Pura, and Y-box-binding protein-1), especially in glial cells and neurons [1, 2]. T antigen promotes viral gene expression by inhibiting SRSF1 transcription via interaction with the promoter region of SRSF1 [6]. Interferon-g inhibits JCPyV replication by suppressing the expression of T antigen [7]. Tantigen expression is suppressed by glucose deprivation in both medulloblastoma cells and glioblastoma xenografts, which partly results from 5′-activated AMP kinase, and the production of reactive oxygen species [9]

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