Luftig, Micah ANikitin, Pavel A2013-01-162014-01-112012https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6183<p>The interaction of human tumor viruses with host growth suppressive pathways is a fine balance between controlled latent infection and virus-induced oncogenesis. This dissertation elucidates how Epstein-Barr virus interacts with the host growth suppressive DNA damage response signaling pathways (DDR) in order to transform infected human B lymphocytes. </p><p> Here I report that the activation of the ATM/Chk2 branch of the DDR in hyper-proliferating infected B cells results in G1/S cell cycle arrest and limits viral-mediated transformation. Similar growth arrest was found in mitogen-driven proliferating of B cells that sets the DDR as a default growth suppressive mechanism in human B cells. Hence, the viral protein EBNA3C functions to attenuate the host DDR and to promote immortalization of a small portion of infected B cells. Additionally, the pharmacological inhibition of the DDR in vitro increases viral immortalization of memory B cells that facilitates the isolation of broadly neutralizing antibodies to various infectious agents. Overall, this work defines early EBV-infected hyper-proliferating B cells as a new stage in viral infection that determines subsequent viral-mediated tumorigenesis.</p>VirologyGeneticsOncologyB cellChk2DNA damage responseEBNA-3CEpstein-Barr virusmonoclonal antibodyDNA Damage Response Suppresses Epstein-Barr Virus-Driven Proliferation of Primary Human B CellsDissertation