Noncoding RNAs in gamma-Herpesvirus Biology and AIDS Malignancies
Project Number5P01CA214091-09
Former Number2P01CA214091-06
Contact PI/Project LeaderRENNE, ROLF F
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
Description
Abstract Text
SUMMARY
The goal of this program is to use comparative analysis of KSHV, EBV and MHV68 short and long noncoding
RNAs to reveal conserved functions of, and regulatory nodes targeted by, γ-herpesvirus noncoding RNAs during
tumorigenesis. Our unifying hypothesis is that A) γ-herpesviruses utilize short and long noncoding RNAs to
regulate both virus and host gene expression, and B) viral noncoding RNAs and/or virus-perturbed host lncRNAs
directly contribute to the genesis of HIV-associated malignancies. In support of this hypothesis, our program has
made a number of seminal findings during the first funding period, including: identification of high confidence
miRNA targetomes across all three viruses; demonstration of host lncRNA de-regulation in γ-herpesvirus infected
cells; discovery of circRNAs across all three viruses; global resolution of EBV and MHV68 transcriptomes and
discovery of new noncoding transcripts; demonstration that noncoding RNAs are the predominant viral gene
products detectable in some EBV+ malignancies; and demonstration of the first in vivo function for the long-
studied EBV EBER1 noncoding RNA. To date, our results from the first cycle have been reported in 20 research
publications and 5 review articles. To continue to address our unifying hypothesis we propose three highly
integrated projects: Project 1, led by Dr. Renne (University of Florida, UF), will mechanistically study viral
lncRNAs and how KSHV-encoded miRNAs induce alterations of host lncRNA expression in the context of HIV-
associated KSHV malignancies. Project 2, led by Dr. Flemington (Tulane University) will interrogate the role of
EBV (and KSHV) miRNA cluster inhibition of host miRNA maturation through “microprocessor overload” in the
context of HIV-associated EBV malignancies. Project 3 led by Dr. Tibbetts (UF) will investigate the function of
MHV68 miRNAs and short noncoding RNAs and EBV EBERs in a facile murine chronic infection and
tumorigenesis system. The well-organized Administrative core (Core A, Leader: Rolf Renne) will continue to
maintain oversight and organization of the program, including biostatistical consultation and adherence to rigor,
reproducibility, and transparency standards. Three service cores support all three projects: The RNA-seq and
Bioinformatics Core (Core B, Leader: Erik Flemington) at Tulane University will continue to have high impact by
developing innovative algorithms and data analyses pipelines. The Recombinant Virus Core (Core C, Leader:
Rolf Renne) at UF, which has supported the generation and quality control of more than 60 recombinant viruses,
will continue to innovate by implementing CRISPR-Cas-based techniques. The Clinical Sample and
Tumorigenesis Core (Core D, Leader: Scott Tibbetts) at UF will support the analysis of a significant numbers of
EBV and KSHV-associated tumor samples and perform all proposed tumorigenesis studies. In summary, this
program project, which has already had sustained impact on the field, will further increase our understanding of
how viral noncoding RNAs and virus-perturbed host lncRNAs contribute to γ-herpesvirus tumorigenesis with the
goal of defining new vulnerabilities for therapeutic intervention.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Narrative
The unifying postulate of this competitive renewal P01 proposal is that comparative studies of KSHV, EBV, and
MHV68 will continue to accelerate the discovery of pathways regulated by non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs). Our
findings over the last 4 years indicate that both short and long ncRNAs contribute to γ-herpesvirus latency and
tumorigenesis.
No Sub Projects information available for 5P01CA214091-09
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
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Patents
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Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
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Clinical Studies
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History
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