Virus Dataset Sample Info

> Dataset: 22962577 Search Result


Summary
Item Summary
Project 22962577
Virus Name HBV
Sample Number 60
Disease Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
Country China

Sample
ID Sample ID Age Gender Origin Detail
1 09HCC-1 54 M China View
2 09HCC-2 64 M China View
3 09HCC-4 59 F China View
4 09HCC-6 53 M China View
5 09HCC-7 51 F China View
6 09HCC-9 53 M China View
7 09HCC-10 46 M China View
8 09HCC-12 37 M China View
9 09HCC-19 58 M China View
10 09HCC-21 47 F China View
11 09HCC-23 58 F China View
12 09HCC-24 57 M China View
13 09HCC-26 58 M China View
14 09HCC-27 42 M China View
15 09HCC-29 57 M China View
16 09HCC-31 46 M China View
17 09HCC-32 60 M China View
18 09HCC-34 37 F China View
19 09HCC-38 56 M China View
20 09HCC-39 43 F China View
21 9HCC-40 54 M China View
22 09HCC-42 48 M China View
23 09HCC-44 48 M China View
24 09HCC-49 65 M China View
25 09HCC-53 46 M China View
26 09HCC-54 38 M China View
27 09HCC-57 68 M China View
28 09HCC-58 45 M China View
29 09HCC-60 57 M China View
30 09HCC-61 65 M China View
31 09HCC-62 42 F China View
32 09HCC-64 60 M China View
33 09HCC-65 53 M China View
34 09HCC-67 49 M China View
35 09HCC-68 51 M China View
36 09HCC-69 63 M China View
37 09HCC-70 47 M China View
38 09HCC-73 50 M China View
39 09HCC-74 47 F China View
40 09HCC-75 55 M China View
41 324 48 M China View
42 325 34 M China View
43 331 44 M China View
44 336 44 M China View
45 337 47 M China View
46 339 36 M China View
47 348 38 M China View
48 350 46 M China View
49 351 48 M China View
50 359 41 M China View
51 197 51 F China View
52 346 54 F China View
53 414 39 F China View
54 432 70 F China View
55 493 54 F China View
56 508 45 F China View
57 509 64 F China View
58 535 47 F China View
59 571 49 F China View
60 585 56 F China View

Literature
Item Summary
PMID 22962577
Title Re-evaluation of the Carcinogenic Significance of Hepatitis B Virus Integration in Hepatocarcinogenesis
Abstract To examine the role of hepatitis B virus (HBV) integration in hepatocarcinogenesis, a systematic comparative study of both tumor and their corresponding non-tumor derived tissue has been conducted in a cohort of 60 HBV associated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients. By using Alu-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and ligation-mediated PCR, 233 viral-host junctions mapped across all human chromosomes at random, no difference between tumor and non-tumor tissue was observed, with the exception of fragile sites (P = 0.0070). HBV insertions in close proximity to cancer related genes such as hTERT were found in this study, however overall they were rare events. No direct correlation between chromosome aberrations and the number of HBV integration events was found using a sensitive array-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) assay. However, a positive correlation was observed between the status of several tumor suppressor genes (TP53, RB1, CDNK2A and TP73) and the number of chromosome aberrations (r = 0.6625, P = 0.0003). Examination of the viral genome revealed that 43% of inserts were in the preC/C region and 57% were in the HBV X gene. Strikingly, approximately 24% of the integrations examined had a breakpoint in a short 15 nt viral genome region (1820-1834 nt). As a consequence, all of the confirmed X gene insertions were C-terminal truncated, losing their growth-suppressive domain. However, the same pattern of X gene C-terminal truncation was found in both tumor and non-tumor derived samples. Furthermore, the integrated viral sequences in both groups had a similar low frequency of C1653T, T1753V and A1762T/G1764A mutations. The frequency and patterns of HBV insertions were similar between tumor and their adjacent non-tumor samples indicating that the majority of HBV DNA integration events are not associated with hepatocarcinogenesis.