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Systematic identification of interactions between host cell proteins and E7 oncoproteins from diverse human papillomaviruses
Systematic identification of interactions between host cell proteins and E7 oncoproteins from diverse human papillomaviruses
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Systematic identification of interactions between host cell proteins and E7 oncoproteins from diverse human papillomaviruses
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Systematic identification of interactions between host cell proteins and E7 oncoproteins from diverse human papillomaviruses
Systematic identification of interactions between host cell proteins and E7 oncoproteins from diverse human papillomaviruses

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Systematic identification of interactions between host cell proteins and E7 oncoproteins from diverse human papillomaviruses
Systematic identification of interactions between host cell proteins and E7 oncoproteins from diverse human papillomaviruses
Journal Article

Systematic identification of interactions between host cell proteins and E7 oncoproteins from diverse human papillomaviruses

2012
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Overview
More than 120 human papillomaviruses (HPVs) have now been identified and have been associated with a variety of clinical lesions. To understand the molecular differences among these viruses that result in lesions with distinct pathologies, we have begun a MS-based proteomic analysis of HPV–host cellular protein interactions and have created the plasmid and cell line libraries required for these studies. To validate our system, we have characterized the host cellular proteins that bind to the E7 proteins expressed from 17 different HPV types. These studies reveal a number of interactions, some of which are conserved across HPV types and others that are unique to a single HPV species or HPV genus. Binding of E7 to UBR4/p600 is conserved across all virus types, whereas the cellular protein ENC1 binds specifically to the E7s from HPV18 and HPV45, both members of genus alpha, species 7. We identify a specific interaction of HPV16 E7 with ZER1, a substrate specificity factor for a cullin 2 (CUL2)-RING ubiquitin ligase, and show that ZER1 is required for the binding of HPV16 E7 to CUL2. We further show that ZER1 is required for the destabilization of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor RB1 in HPV16 E7-expressing cells and propose that a CUL2–ZER1 complex functions to target RB1 for degradation in HPV16 E7-expressing cells. These studies refine the current understanding of HPV E7 functions and establish a platform for the rapid identification of virus–host interactions.