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  <STUDY alias="ena-STUDY-GIGA-R University of Liege-10-02-2017-13:42:37:177-102" center_name="GIGA-R University of Liege" accession="ERP021420">
    <IDENTIFIERS>
      <PRIMARY_ID>ERP021420</PRIMARY_ID>
      <EXTERNAL_ID namespace="BioProject">PRJEB19394</EXTERNAL_ID>
      <SUBMITTER_ID namespace="GIGA-R University of Liege">ena-STUDY-GIGA-R University of Liege-10-02-2017-13:42:37:177-102</SUBMITTER_ID>
    </IDENTIFIERS>
    <DESCRIPTOR>
      <STUDY_TITLE>RNA-seq reveals cis-perturbation of key host genes by the HTLV-1/BLV proviruses</STUDY_TITLE>
      <STUDY_TYPE existing_study_type="Other"/>
      <STUDY_ABSTRACT>An estimated 10 to 20 million humans and 50 million dairy cattle are infected with the closely-related Human T-cell leukemia virus type-1 (HTLV-1) and Bovine Leukemia Virus (BLV) respectively. These retroviruses infect T (HTLV-1) and B (BLV) lymphocytes, provoking an asymptomatic polyclonal expansion that will evolve into an aggressive lethal monoclonal leukemia in ~5% of individuals following decades of latency. It is generally assumed that early oncogenic changes are largely dependent on virus-encoded products and especially the trans-activating effects of the Tax and HTLV-1 bZIP HBZ oncoproteins, while progression to acute leukemia/lymphoma involves somatic mutations in cancer drivers, yet that both are independent of proviral integration site that has been found to be very variable between tumors. Using RNA-seq we demonstrate that HTLV-1/BLV proviruses are integrated in the vicinity of cancer drivers which they perturb either by provirus-dependent transcription termination or as a result of viral antisense RNA-dependent cis-perturbation.  RNA-seq of ATLs (HTLV-1) and B-cell tumors (BLV) revealed in all tumors (i) the complete absence of viral 5’LTR-dependent sense transcripts (corresponding to the gag, pol, env structural genes and the regulatory genes including tax) and (ii) abundant 3’LTR-dependent antisense transcripts (3’AS) corresponding to HTLV-1 Hbz and BLV As1/2 RNAs. Additionally, mapping the RNA reads to the proviral and host reference genomes uncovered 5’LTR-dependent transcriptional termination of the interrupted gene in ~23 % of the tumors. In the remaining ~77 % of the tumors, this revealed the systematic interactions between the viral antisense transcripts (3’AS) and host genes located upstream of the provirus.</STUDY_ABSTRACT>
      <CENTER_PROJECT_NAME>HTLV-1/BLV-dependent cis-perturbation of cancer drivers</CENTER_PROJECT_NAME>
      <STUDY_DESCRIPTION>An estimated 10 to 20 million humans and 50 million dairy cattle are infected with the closely-related Human T-cell leukemia virus type-1 (HTLV-1) and Bovine Leukemia Virus (BLV) respectively. These retroviruses infect T (HTLV-1) and B (BLV) lymphocytes, provoking an asymptomatic polyclonal expansion that will evolve into an aggressive lethal monoclonal leukemia in ~5% of individuals following decades of latency. It is generally assumed that early oncogenic changes are largely dependent on virus-encoded products and especially the trans-activating effects of the Tax and HTLV-1 bZIP HBZ oncoproteins, while progression to acute leukemia/lymphoma involves somatic mutations in cancer drivers, yet that both are independent of proviral integration site that has been found to be very variable between tumors. Using RNA-seq we demonstrate that HTLV-1/BLV proviruses are integrated in the vicinity of cancer drivers which they perturb either by provirus-dependent transcription termination or as a result of viral antisense RNA-dependent cis-perturbation.  RNA-seq of ATLs (HTLV-1) and B-cell tumors (BLV) revealed in all tumors (i) the complete absence of viral 5’LTR-dependent sense transcripts (corresponding to the gag, pol, env structural genes and the regulatory genes including tax) and (ii) abundant 3’LTR-dependent antisense transcripts (3’AS) corresponding to HTLV-1 Hbz and BLV As1/2 RNAs. Additionally, mapping the RNA reads to the proviral and host reference genomes uncovered 5’LTR-dependent transcriptional termination of the interrupted gene in ~23 % of the tumors. In the remaining ~77 % of the tumors, this revealed the systematic interactions between the viral antisense transcripts (3’AS) and host genes located upstream of the provirus.</STUDY_DESCRIPTION>
    </DESCRIPTOR>
    <STUDY_ATTRIBUTES>
      <STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
        <TAG>ENA-FIRST-PUBLIC</TAG>
        <VALUE>2017-05-14</VALUE>
      </STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
      <STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
        <TAG>ENA-LAST-UPDATE</TAG>
        <VALUE>2017-02-11</VALUE>
      </STUDY_ATTRIBUTE>
    </STUDY_ATTRIBUTES>
  </STUDY>
</STUDY_SET>
