Physical state and transcription of the cottontail rabbit papillomavirus genome in warts and transplantable VX2 and VX7 carcinomas of domestic rabbits.

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The physical state and the transcription of the genome of cottontail rabbit papillomavirus (CRPV) in non-virus-producing warts and in the VX2 and VX7 transplantable carcinomas of domestic rabbits were compared. The CRPV DNA present in VX2 and VX7 carcinomas (10 to 20 and 100 to 200 genome equivalents per diploid cell, respectively) was found to be entirely integrated into the cellular DNA, most probably as head-to-tail tandem repeats, in contrast to warts, in which viral DNA (10 to 100 copies per diploid cell) was found only as free, mainly monomeric, molecules. In the VX7 tumor, ca. 50% of the viral DNA molecules were found to be longer than one genome length, indicating that viral DNA rearrangements had occurred. A major viral transcript of 1,250 bases was detected in warts and in VX2 and VX7 carcinomas. Complementary sequences were localized within the E region, the putative transforming region inferred from the nucleotide sequence of the CRPV genome (I. Giri, O. Danos, and M. Yaniv, manuscript in preparation). Analysis of heteroduplexes formed between single-stranded CRPV DNA and polyadenylated RNAs from the VX2 tumor showed that the 1,250-base RNA resulted from the splicing of the sequences corresponding to the open reading frame E6 to those corresponding to the 3' third of E2. A second viral transcript, measuring 2,000 bases, was detected in warts and, in lesser amounts than the 1,250-base species, in VX2 carcinoma, and a 2,100-base RNA was found in VX7 carcinoma. Complementary sequences to these messengers were localized to the same part of the genome as the 1,250-base species and to a contiguous fragment situated upstream. Heteroduplex analysis showed that the 2,000-base species from VX2 carcinoma resulted from the splicing of the sequences corresponding to E6 and E7 to those corresponding to the 3' third of E2. The sequences spliced out upon the maturation of the two messengers of VX2 carcinoma correspond to E1, the two-thirds of E2, and most of E4. Additional transcripts were found in VX7 carcinoma, a major 3,100-base species transcribed from the E region, and several minor species, measuring from 2,400 bases, which all hybridize with a subgenomic fragment contained in the L region encoding the viral capsid polypeptides. This could account for the antiviral antibodies found in animals bearing the VX7 carcinoma.

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