Laboratory of Tumor Cell Biology National Cancer
Institute Bethesda, Maryland 20014
I. Introduction
Type-C RNA viruses have been isolated from many species. In several,
they have been often associated with leukemia and shown to reproduce
the disease on inoculation into recipient animals. In a few species
the data appear now to be conclusive that they are the major cause
of the natural disease. Two major difficulties in verifying results
that the virus causes the disease in some animal systems have been:
(1) the long latent period for evident disease, and (2) the fact
that many type-C viruses are apparently not oncogenic. Regarding
the latter, we have argued for a major subdivision of these viruses
based on a molecular hybridization assay (see below).
Conclusions
We believe human myelogenous leukemia blood cells do not frequently
permit complete expression of type-C viral information, but this
information is at least partially present in many and perhaps all
AML patients. This is in contrast to the case of some animals like
cats where most animals with leukemia actively produce virus. On
the other hand, even with cats there is variation. The occasional
(or rare) infected animal does not completely express virus (M.
Essex, personal communication). Conversely, patient A. S. (HL-23)
may be the unusual or rare human, who after appropriate growth stimulation
of her leukemic cells, expresses completely and releases whole virus.
One difficulty with our interpretation is our inability to detect
the complete provirus.' This results in a paradox revolving around
the question how do human leukemic cells become transformed and
how can they release virus if they lack the complete genetic information
apparently essential in animal model systems for transformation
and virus production? We think that generally the integrated complete
provirus may be in only a small number of cells, perhaps not even
the leukemic cell precursors. Release of fragments of the provirus
by the infected cells may be sufficient, in some instances, to transform
leukocyte precursors. This model is compatible with the existing
data on human leukemia, including the detection of extra sequences
in human leukemic DNA by Spiegelman and associates (41). At least
one tissue or cell population should contain cells with complete
provirus. Portions of this provirus may integrate into leukocyte
progenitors, a necessary prelude to leukemic transformation. On
occasion complete provirus may integrate into some leukocyte precursors,
the necessary event for the rare complete virus production. We suggest
that the site of integration for fragments or whole provirus is
the "hot spot" region discussed before at this workshop ( 4) and
that this may alter gene expression by a mechanism called "paraprocessing"
(1) which in turn leads to transformation. If this speculation is
correct, detection of the complete provirus as the proof for the
involvement of these viruses in man will be extremely difficult.'*
Other approaches will be necessary such as additional virus isolates
from other laboratories and/or a clear seroepidemiological studies.
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