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Retroviruses
as Carcinogens and Pathogens: Expectations and Reality
Peter H. Duesberg
Perspectives in Cancer Research
[Cancer Research 47, 1199-1220, March 1, 1987]
Department
of Molecular Biology and Virus Laboratory,
University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract
Retroviruses (without transforming genes) are thought to cause
leukemia's and other cancers in animals and humans because they
were originally isolated from those diseases and because experimental
infections of new-borns may induce leukemia's with probabilities
of 0 to 90%. According to this hypothesis viral cancers should be
contagious, polyclonal, and preventable by immunization. However,
retroviruses are rather widespread in healthy animals and humans
where they typically cause latent infections and antiviral immunity.
The leukemia risk of such infections is less than 0.1% and thus
about as low as that of virus-free controls. Indeed retroviruses
are not sufficient to initiate transformation (a) because of the
low percentage of symptomatic virus carriers and the complete lack
of transforming function in vitro; (b) because of the striking discrepancies
between the long latent periods of 0.5 to 10 years for carcinogenesis
and the short eclipse of days to weeks for virus replication and
direct pathogenic and immunogenic effects; © because there
is no gene with a late transforming function, since all genes are
essential for replication; (d) because host genes, which do not
inhibit virus, inhibit tumorigenesis up to 100% if intact and determine
the nature of the tumor if defective; and above all (e) because
of the monoclonal origin of viral leukemias, defined by viral integration
sites that are different in each tumor. On these bases the probability
that a virus-infected cell will become transformed is estimated
to be about 10 (11th power). The viruses are also not
necessary to maintain transformation, since many animal and all
bovine and human tumors do not express viral antigens or RNA or
contain only incomplete proviruses. Thus as carcinogens retroviruses
do not or only very rarely (10 (11th power)) fulfill
the third. Therefore it has been proposed that retroviruses transform
inefficiently by activating latent cellular oncogenes by for example
provirus integration. This predicts diploid tumors with great diversity,
because integration sites are different in each tumor. However,
the uniformity of different viral and even nonviral tumors of the
same lineage, their common susceptibility to the same tumor resistance
genes, and transformation-specific chromosome abnormalities shared
with nonviral tumors each argue for cellular transforming genes.
Indeed clonal chromosome abnormalities are the only known transformation-specific
determinants of viral tumors. Since tumors originate with these
abnormalities, these or associated events, rather than preexisting
viruses, must initiate transformation. Therefore it is proposed
that transformation is a virus-independent event and that clonal
viral integration sites are consequences of clonal proliferation
of transformed cells. The role of the virus in carcinogenesis is
limited to the induction of hyperplasia which is necessary but not
sufficient for carcinogenesis. Hyperplasia depends on chronic viremia
or high virus expression which are very rare in animals outside
the laboratory and have never been observed in humans. Since latent
viruses, which are typical of nearly all natural infections, are
neither direct nor indirect carcinogens, they are not targets for
cancer prevention. Viruses are also not targets for cancer therapy,
since tumors are not maintained and not directly initiated by viral
genes and occur naturally despite active antiviral immunity.
Lymphotropic retrovirus has been proposed to cause AIDS because
90% of the patients have antibody to the virus. Therefore antibody
to the virus is used to diagnose AIDS and those at risk for AIDS.
The virus has also been suggested as a cause of diseases of the
lung and the nervous system. Promiscuous male homosexuals and recipients
of frequent transfusions are at high risk for infection and also
at a relatively high risk for AIDS, which averages 0.3% and may
reach 5%. Others are at a low risk for infection and if infected
are at no risk for AIDS. AIDS viruses are thought to kill T-cells,
although these viruses depend on mitosis for replication and do
not lyse cells in asymptomatic infections. Indeed the virus is not
sufficient to cause AIDS (a) because the percentage of symptomatic
carriers is low and varies between 0 and 5% with the risk group
of the carrier, suggesting a cofactor or another cause; (b) because
the latent period for AIDS is 5 years compared to an eclipse of
only days to weeks for replication and direct pathogenic and immunogenic
effects; and © because there is no gene with a late AIDS function,
since all viral genes are essential for replication. Moreover the
extremely low levels of virus expression and infiltration cast doubt
on whether the virus is even necessary to cause AIDS or any of the
other diseases with which it is associated. Typically, proviral
DNA is detectable in only 15% of AIDS patients and then only in
one of 10 (2nd power) to 10 (3rd power) lymphocytes
and is expressed in only 1 of 10 (4th power) to 10 (5th
power) lymphocytes. Thus the virus is inactive or latent in carriers
with and without AIDS. It is for this reason that it is not transmitted
as a cell-free agent. By contrast, all other viruses are expressed
at high titers when they function as pathogens. Therefore AIDS virus
could be just the most common occupational infection of those at
risk for AIDS because retroviruses are not cytocidal and unlike
most viruses persist as latent, nonpathogenic infections. As such
the virus is an indicator of sera that may cause AIDS. Vaccination
is not likely to benefit virus carriers, because nearly all have
active antiviral immunity.
How often have I said to you, that when you have eliminated
the impossible, whatever remains however improbable must be the
truth.
-- Sherlock Holmes
The irreversible and predictable courses of most cancers indicate
that cancer has a genetic basis. In 1914 Boveri (1) proposed that
cancer is caused by chromosomal mutations. This hypothesis has since
received ample support (2-4), although a cellular cancer gene has
yet to be identified (5). In the light of the spectacular discovery
of RSV* in 1911, which proved to be a direct, infectious carcinogen,
the hypothesis emerged that viruses may be a significant source
of exogenous cancer genes (6). The virus-cancer hypothesis has since
steadily gained support because retroviruses and DNA viruses were
frequently isolated from animal leukemias and other tumors, and
occasionally from human leukemias, in efforts to identify causative
agents (7-16). However, once discovered in tumors and named tumor
viruses, most of these viruses were subsequently found to be widespread
in healthy animals and humans (8, 12-18). Thus these viruses are
compatible with the first but apparently not necessarily with the
third of Koch's postulates** as viral carcinogens. Only a few of
the many tumor viruses are indeed directly oncogenic, such as RSV
and about 20 other types of retroviruses (5, 13, 19, 20), and hence
compatible with Koch's third postulate. Therefore, if we want to
assess the role of viruses in cancer, there must be a clear separation
between those viruses which are directly oncogenic and those which
are not. The directly oncogenic retroviruses owe their transforming
function to a particular class of genes which are termed onc genes
(20). These are as yet the only known autonomous cancer genes that
can transform diploid cells in vitro as well as in animals susceptible
to the particular virus (5). Since susceptible cells are inevitably
transformed as soon as they are infected, the resulting tumors are
polyclonal (13, 16). Nevertheless, directly oncogenic retroviruses
have never caused epidemics of cancer. The probable reason is that
onc genes are not essential for the survival of the virus and hence
are readily lost by spontaneous deletion or mutation (5). Indeed,
onc genes were originally discovered by the analysis of spontaneous
onc deletion mutants of RSV (21). Moreover, because onc genes typically
replace essential genes (except in some strains of RSV) these viruses
cannot replicate unless aided by a nondefective helper virus (5,
13).
The vast majority of the tumor viruses are retroviruses and DNA
viruses that do not contain onc genes. The RNA genomes of all retroviruses
without onc genes measure only 8 or 9 kilobases (13, 22). They all
encode three major essential genes which virtually exhaust their
coding capacity. These are in the 5' to 3' map order gag which encodes
the viral core protein, pol which encodes the reverse transcriptase,
and env which encodes the envelope glycoprotein (23, 24). Although
these viruses lack onc genes they are considered tumor viruses,
because they were originally isolated from tumors and because experimental
infections may induce tumors under certain conditions. However,
in contrast to tumors caused by viruses with onc genes, such tumors
are always monoclonal and induced reproducively only in genetically
selected animals inoculated as newborns after latent periods of
over 6 months (see below). Because of the long latent periods, these
retroviruses are said to be "slow" viruses (13, 16), although
their mechanism of replication is exactly the same as that of their
fast and efficient relatives with onc genes that transform cells
as soon as they infect them (5, 19) (Table 1). The retroviruses
are also considered to be plausible natural carcinogens because
they are not cytocidal and hence compatible with neoplastic growth
and other slow diseases. Indeed, retroviruses are the only viruses
that depend on mitosis for replication (13, 25).
However, the retroviruses without onc genes are also the most common
and benign passenger viruses of healthy animals and humans probably
because of their unique noncytocidal mechanism of replication and
their characteristic ability to coexist with their hosts without
causing any pathogenic symptoms either as latent infections, which
make no biochemical demands, or even as productive infections. Based
on the permissiveness of a host for expression and reproduction,
they have been divided into exogenous viruses which are typically
expressed and hence potentially pathogenic and endogenous viruses
which are typically latent and hence nonpathogenic (16-18). Because
they are so readily suppressed in response to as yet undefined cellular
suppressors (8, 11, 12, 16-18), endogenous viruses are integrated
as proviruses into the germ line of most if not all vertebrates
(8, 13, 16-18). Nevertheless, the endogenous and exogenous retroviruses
are entirely isogenic and there is no absolute biochemical or functional
distinction between them except for their response to suppressors
of a particular host (13, 16-18) (Part I, Section A). Therefore
the association of these viruses with a given disease is not sufficient
even to suggest a causative role in it. Indeed there is as yet no
direct evidence that retroviruses play a role as natural carcinogens
of wild animals and humans. Thus the critical expectations of the
virus-cancer hypothesis, namely that RNA or DNA tumor viruses would
be direct carcinogens, that viral tumors would be polyclonal because
each virus-infected cell would be transformed, and above all that
viral carcinogenesis would be preventable by immunization, remain
largely unconfirmed.
Recently retroviruses without onc genes have been isolated from
patients with AIDS and those at risk for AIDS and have since been
considered the cause of AIDS (26). In contrast to other retroviruses,
the AIDS viruses are thought to act as direct, cytocidal pathogens
that kill susceptible T-cells (13, 27).
Here we discuss how the retroviruses without onc genes fit the
role of viral carcinogens or AIDS pathogens and whether these viruses
are indeed the vessels of evil they have been labeled to be. Above
all we hope to identify transformation-specific or AIDS-specific
viral and cellular determinants and functions. Since the genetic
repertoire of all retroviruses without onc genes, including that
of the AIDS viruses (28), is exhausted by genes that are essential
for virus replication (13,24), a hypothetical oncogenic or AIDS
function would have to be indirect or it would have to be encoded
by one of the essential genes. In the second case the virus would
be oncogenic or cause AIDS wherever it replicates. A survey of the
best studied animal and human retroviruses demonstrates that these
viruses are not sufficient to cause tumors and not necessary to
maintain them. Most likely these viruses play a role in inducing
tumors indirectly. Indeed transformation appears to be a virus-independent,
cellular event for which chromosome abnormalities are the only specific
markers. Likewise the AIDS viruses are shown not to be sufficient
to cause AIDS, and the evidence that they are necessary to cause
it is debated.
1. Retroviruses and Cancer
A. Retroviruses Are Not Sufficient for Transformation Because
Less Than 0.1% of Infected Animals or Humans Develop Tumors
Avian lymphomatosis virus was originally isolated from leukemic
chickens (29). However, subsequent studies proved that latent infection
by avian lymphomatosis viruses occurs in all chicken flocks and
that by sexual maturity most birds are infected (30-32). Statistics
report an annual incidence of 2 to 3% lymphomatoses in some inbred
flocks. Yet these statistics include the more common lymphomas caused
by Marek's virus (a herpes virus) (33, 34). The apparent paradox
that the same virus is present in most normal and healthy animals
(30) but may be leukemogenic in certain conditions was resolved
at least in descriptive terms by experimental and congenital contact
infections. Typically experimental or contact infection of newborn
animals that are not protected by maternal antibody would induce
chronic (31, 32) or temporal (35, 36) viremia. The probability of
such animals for subsequent lymphomatosis ranges from 0 to 90% depending
on tumor resistance genes (Section C). However, infection of immunocompetent
adults or of newborn animals protected by maternal antibody and
later by active immunity would induce latent, persistent infections
with a very low risk of less than 1% for lymphomatosis (32, H. Rubin,
personal communication.) Thus only viremic animals are likely to
develop leukemia at a predictable risk.
Viremia has a fast proliferative effect on hemopoietic cells and
generates lymphoblast hyperplasia (Fig. 1) (32, 36, 37). Hyperplasia
appears to be necessary but not sufficient for later leukemogenesis
because it does not lead to leukemia in tumor-resistant birds (36)
(Section C) and because removal of the burso of Fabricius, the major
site of lymphoproliferation, prevents development of the disease
(9, 32).
The murine leukemia viruses were also originally isolated from
leukemic inbred mice (9) and subsequently detected as latent infections
in most healthy mice (8, 13, 16, 17, 38). Indeed, about 0.5% of
the DNA of a normal mouse is estimated to be proviral DNA of endogenous
retroviruses, corresponding to 500 proviral equivalents per cell
(18). Nevertheless leukemia in feral mice is apparently very rare.
For instance low virus expression, but not a single leukemia, was
recorded in 20% of wild mice (38) probably because wild mice restrict
virus expression and thus never become viremic and leukemic. However,
in an inbred stock of feral mice predisposed to lymphoma and paralysis,
90% were viremic from an early age, of which 5% developed lymphomas
at about 18 months (39).
Experimental infections of newborn, inbred mice with appropriate
strains of murine leukemia viruses induce chronic viremias. Such
viremic mice develop leukemias with probabilities of 0 to 90% depending
on the mouse strain (Section C). However, if mice that are susceptible
to leukemogenesis are infected by the time they are immunocompetent
or are protected by maternal antibodies if infected as neonates,
no chronic viremia and essentially no leukemia are observed (although
a latent infection is established) (41). Thus leukemogenesis depends
on viremia (40) as with the avian system. However, viremia is not
sufficient, because certain tumor-resistant strains do not develop
leukemia even in the presence of viremia (42) (Section C). Again
viremia has an early proliferative effect on lymphocytes which has
been exploited to quantitate these viruses in vivo within 2 weeks
by the "spleen weight" or "spleen colony" assay
(18, 43-47). This hyperplasia of lymphocytes is necessary for leukemogenesis,
because the risk that an infected animal will develop leukemia is
drastically reduced or eliminated by thymectomy, which is a major
source of cells for prospective leukemogenesis (9).
The AKR mouse is a special example in which spontaneous expression
of endogenus virus and the absence of tumor resistance genes inevitably
lead to viremia at a few weeks after birth and, in 90% of the animals,
to leukemia at 6 to 12 months of age (9, 41, 48). This also shows
that endogenous viruses can be just as pathogenic or leukemogenic
as exogenous viruses if they are expressed at a high level. Likewise,
endogenous avian retroviruses are leukemogenic in chickens permissive
for acute infection (49, 50).
The evidence that mammary carcinomas are transmissible by a milk-borne
virus, MMTV, indicates that the virus is an etiological faction
(51, 52). However, the same virus is also endogenous but not expressed
in most healthy mice (16, 53). Since no mammary tumors have been
reported in wild mice the natural incidence must be very low, but
in mice bred for high incidence of mammary carcinomas it may rise
to 90% (13, 16, 54, 55). As with the leukemia viruses, the risk
for tumorigenesis was shown to depend on a high level of virus expression
from an early age and on the development of hyperplasias that are
necessary but not sufficient for carcinogenesis (56, 57). For example,
BALB/c mice that express over 100 mu-g virus per ml milk all develop
tumors after latencies of over 12 months, but mice that express
3 mu-g or less virus per ml develop no tumors at all (54, 58).
Feline leukemia virus was originally isolated from cats with lymphosarcoma
(59) and subsequently from many healthy cats. It is estimated that
at least 50 to 60% of all cats become naturally infected by feline
leukemia viruses at some time during their lives (60, 61). However,
only about 0.04% of all cats develop leukemia on an annual basis
(62), which is thought to be caused by these viruses (13, 61, 63).
Most natural infections cause transient virus expression which is
followed by an immune response, after which little virus is expressed
(60, 64, 65). Such infections do not induce leukemias at a predictable
rate (61). However, 1 to 2% of the naturally infected cats become
chronically viremic (66). About 28% of the viremic cats develop
leukemias after latent periods of 2 years. Thus viremia indicates
a high risk for the development of leukemia (66). Viremia may result
from a congenital infection in the absence of maternal antibody
or from a native immunodeficiency. As in the avian and murine systems,
experimental infection of newborn, immunotolerant cats produces
early viremia and runting diseases and late leukemias at a much
higher incidence than natural infections (63, 64, 67, 68). The gibbon
ape leukemia virus was also initially discovered in leukemic apes
and was later isolated from healthy gibbons (13, 69). Again, only
chronically viremic gibbons were shown to be at risk for leukemia
(70).
The bovine and human retroviruses associated with acute leukemias
are always biochemically inactive or latent (Section D). Viremia,
which is frequently associated with a leukemia of congenitally or
experimentally infected domestic chickens, cats, or inbred mice,
has never been observed in the bovine or human system. Accordingly
bovine and human leukemia viruses could be isolated from certain
leukemic cells only after cultivation in vitro away from the suppressive
immune system of the host (71, 72). In regions of endemic bovine
leukemia virus infection 60 to 100% of all animals in a herd were
found to contain antiviral antibody (73, 74). However, the incidence
of leukemia was reported to range only from 0.01 to 0.4% (16, 73).
Experimental infections with cell-free virus have not provided conclusive
evidence for viral leukemogenesis. As yet only 1 of 25 animals infected
with bovine leukemia virus has developed a leukemia 7 years after
inoculation (73). Additional inoculations of 20 newborn calves did
not cause a single leukemia within 5 years, although all animals
developed antiviral antibody. [J. M. Miller and M. S. Van der Maaten,
personal communication.] However, 50% of newborn sheep inoculated
with bovine leukemia virus developed leukemia about 4 years later
(75). These sheep were probably more susceptible to the bovine virus
than cattle, because they would lack maternal antibody to the virus.
Indeed they could have been transiently viremic, because antibody
was detected only 4 months after inoculation (75).
HTLV-1 or ATLV was originally isolated from a human cell line derived
from a patient with T-cell leukemia (71). It replicates in T-cells
(27) and also in endothelial cells (76) or fibroblasts (77). The
virus was subsequently shown, using antiviral antibody for detection,
to be endemic as latent, asymptomatic infections in Japan and the
Caribbean (27). Since virus expression is undetectably low not only
in healthy but also in leukemic virus carriers, infections must
be diagnosed indirectly by antiviral antibody or biochemically by
searching for latent proviral DNA (Section D). Due to the complete
and consistent latency, the virus can be isolated from infected
cells only after activation in vitro when it is no longer controlled
by the host's antiviral immunity and suppressors. Therefore the
virus is not naturally transmitted as a cell-free agent like other
pathogenic viruses, but only congenitally, sexually, or by blood
transfusion, that is, by contacts that involve exchange of infected
cells (13, 27).
It is often pointed out that functional evidence for the virus-cancer
hypothesis is difficult to obtain in humans because experimental
infection is not possible and thus Koch's third postulate cannot
be tested. However, this argument does not apply here since naturally
and chronically infected, asymptomatic human carriers are abundant.
Yet most infections never lead to leukemias and none have ever been
observed to cause viremias. Moreover, not a single adult T-cell
leukemia was observed in recipients of blood transfusions from virus-positive
donors (13, 78, 79), although recipients developed antiviral antibody
(81).
The incidence of adult T-cell leukemia among Japanese with antiviral
immunity is estimated to be only 0.06% based on 339 cases of T-cell
leukemia among 600,000 antibody-positive subjects (78). Other studies
have detected antiviral antibody in healthy Swedish donors (268)
and in 3.4% of 1.2 x 10 (6 power) healthy Japanese blood donors
(79). Further, it was reported that 0.9% of the people of Taiwan
are antibody positive, but the incidence of the leukemia was not
mentioned (80).
In conclusion, the tumor risk of the statistically most relevant
group of retrovirus infections, namely the latent natural infections
with antiviral immunity, is very low. It averages less than 0.1%
in different species, as it is less than 1% in domestic chickens,
undetectably low in wild mice, 0.04% in cattle, and 0.06% in humans.
Thus the virus is not sufficient to cause cancer.
Moreover, since the viruses associated with all human tumors and
most natural tumors of animals are latent and frequently defective
(Section D), it is difficult to justify the claims that these viruses
play any causative role in tumorigenesis. Indeed nearly all healthy
chickens, mice, cats, cattle, and humans carry endogenous and exogenous
retroviruses that are latent and hence neither pathogenic nor oncogenic
(12, 16-18, 78, 82). Latent infections by cytocidal viruses, such
as herpes viruses, are likewise all asymptomatic (83). Nevertheless
it may be argued that only a small percentage of retroviral infections
are expected to be oncogenic because only a small percentage of
all other viral or microbial infections are pathogenic. However,
the low percentage of symptomatic infections with other viruses
and microbes reflects the low percentage of acute infections that
have overwhelmed host defense mechanisms, but not a low percentage
of latent infections that cause disease. Thus there is no orthodox
explanation for the claims that some murine and avian, most feline,
and all bovine and human leukemias (Section D) are the work of latent
viruses.
Even the view that retroviruses cause leukemia or carcinoma directly
in productive infections is debatable, because indeed highly productive
infections are frequently asymptomatic. For example, despite chronic
acute viremias certain chickens, mice, or cats, inoculated experimentally
or by contact as immuno-tolerant newborns, do not develop leukemia
(see above and Section C). Further no malignant transformation has
ever been observed in cultured cells that are actively producing
retroviruses, and the probability that an infected cell of an animal
will become transformed is only 10 (11th power) (Section
F). This low probability that a productively infected cell will
become transformed is a uniquely retrovirus-specific reason for
asymptomatic infections. It is for this reason that retroviruses
without onc gene can be asymptomatic for cancer even in acute, productive
infections of animals (30, 31, 36, 42, 66, 70), although they may
then cause other diseases (Section B).
Thus retrovirus infections are not only asymptomatic due to latency
and low levels of virus infiltration, like all other viruses, but
are also asymptomatic due to a particular discrepancy between acute
and productive infection and oncogenesis. To answer the question
of why some viremic animals do and others do not develop leukemia
and why tumors appear so late after infection (Section B), both
tumor resistance genes (Section C) and the mechanism of transformation
must be considered (Section H).
B. Discrepancies between the Short Latent Period of Replication
and the Long Latent Periods of Oncogenesis: Further Proof That Virus
Is Not Sufficient for Cancer
Here we compare the kinetics of virus replication and direct pathogenic
and immunogenic effects with the kinetics of virus-induced transformation.
If retroviral genes were sufficient to induce cancer, the kinetics
of carcinogenesis would closely follow the kinetics of virus replication.
Kinetics of Replication and of Early Pathogenic and Immunologenic
Effects. The eclipse period of retrovirus replication has been
determined to be 1 to 3 days in tissue culture (Table 1) using either
transforming onc genes as markers or the appearance of reverse transcriptase
or interference with other viruses or plaque formation for viruses
without onc genes (13, 16) (see below). The incubation period following
which retroviruses without onc genes induce viremia in animals is
1 to several weeks (9, 13, 14, 16) (Table 1). In immunocompetent
animals antiviral immunity follows infections with a lag of 2 to
8 weeks.
In animals, retroviruses without onc genes can be directly pathogenic
if they are expressed at high titers. For instance, avian retroviruses
may cause in newborn chickens diseases of polyclonal proliferative
nature like osteopetrosis, angiosarcoma, hyperthyroidism (84-87),
or hyperplastic follicles of B-cells in the bursa of Fabricius (36,
37) after latencies of 2 to 8 weeks. The same viruses may also cause
diseases of debilitative nature such as stunting, obesity, anemia,
or immunodeficiency after lag periods of 2 to 8 weeks (88, 89).
Infections of newborn mice that cause viremia also cause polyclonal
lymphocyte hyperplasias, splenomegaly, and immuno-suppression several
weeks after infection (47) (Section A). The early appearance of
hyperplastic nodules in mammary tumor virus-infected animals prior
to malignant transformation has also been proposed to be a virus-induced,
hyperplastic effect (56, 57). Infection of newborn kittens with
feline leukemia virus causes early runting effects and depletion
of lymphocytes within 8 to 12 weeks (64, 67, 68) followed by persistent
viremia in up to 80% of the animals (90). In experimentally infected
adult animals mostly transient (85%) and only a few persistent (15%)
viremias are observed (64, 68, 90). Likewise primate retroviruses
such as Mason-Pfizer virus (91) or simian AIDS virus (92) or STLV-III
virus (93) may cause runting, immuno-depression, and mortality several
weeks after inoculation if the animals do not develop antiviral
immunity. These early and direct pathogenic effects of retroviruses
without onc genes depend entirely on acute infections at high virus
titers and occur only in the absence of or prior to antiviral immunity.
Retroviruses have also been observed to be directly pathogenic
by mutagenesis via provirus integration of cellular genes (13, 16,
94, 95). Given about 10 (6th power) kilobases for the
eukaryotic genome and assuming random integration, a given cellular
gene would be mutated in 1 of 10 (6th power) infected
cells (see Sections E and F). Therefore this mechanism of pathogenesis
would play a role in vivo only if mutagenesis were to occur at a
single or few cell stage of development (94) or if such a mutation
would induce clonal proliferation, as is speculated in Section E.
Certain direct, cytopathic effects of retroviruses without onc
genes are also detectable in vitro within days or weeks after infection,
although malignant transformation has never been observed in cell
culture. For example, the avian reticulo-endotheliosis viruses fuse
and kill a fraction of infected cells during the initial phase of
infection (96, 97). Certain strains of avian retroviruses form plaques
of dead primary chicken embryo cells in culture within 7 to 12 days
postinfection. This effect is probably based on cell fusion and
has been used as a reliable virus assay (45, 98). The plaque assays
of murine leukemia viruses on XC rat cells (99) and on mink cells
(101-104) also reflect fast cytopathic effects involving fusions
of infected cells (45). Cell fusion of human lymphocytes in vitro
is also typical of HTLV-I (105, 106) and of AIDS virus (27) (see
Part II). Cells are thought to be fused in vitro by cross-linking
through multivalent bonds between viral envelope antigens and cellular
receptors, a process that requires high local concentration of virus
particles (13, 16, 27, 45, 105). The fusion effect is not observed
in chronic acute or latent infections of animals or humans or in
chronically infected cell lines cultured in vitro. Therefore it
appears to be predominantly a cell culture artifact, possibly resulting
from interaction between virus receptors of uninfected cells with
viruses budding from the surface of adjacent cells. This has been
directly demonstrated by inhibition of HTLV-I-mediated fusion with
antiserum from infected individuals (105). Thus as direct pathogens
the retroviruses are not "slow" viruses, as they are frequently
termed with regard to their presumed role in carcinogenesis. The
"lentiviruses" that are considered models of slow viral
pathogenesis (13), but not carcinogenesis, are no exception. Recently
an ovine lentivirus known as visna or maedi virus was shown to cause
rapid lymphoid interstitial pneumonia in newborn sheep, several
weeks after infection (269). This study pointed out that the virus,
if expressed at high titer, is directly and rapidly pathogenic.
Slow disease may reflect persistent virus expression at restricted
sites.
Late Oncogenesis. Since retroviruses without onc genes do
not transform cells in culture, all measurements of the latent period
of viral oncogenesis are based on studies of infected animals or
humans (Table 1). Typically, the latent periods are dated from the
time of virus infection and thus are somewhat presumptuous, in that
the assumption is made that tumors, if they appear, were initiated
by the virus.
The latent period between experimental or congenital infection
and lymphomatosis in chickens ranges from 6 months to several years
(13, 16, 30, 32, 36, 107). In mice congenitally or experimentally
infected with murine leukemia viruses, leukemia takes 6 to 24 months
to appear (9, 39, 42, 108). The latent period of mammary carcinomagenesis
in mice infected by milk-transmitted MMTV ranges from 6 to 18 months
and typically requires several pregnancies of the mouse (16, 54).
Longer latent periods of up to 24 months are observed in mice that
do not express virus in their milk (55, 109).
The latent period between experimental infection and leukemia is
8 and 12 months in most cats, but only 2 to 3 months in some (62,
66, 90). (The early tumors may have been hyperplasias or tumors
induced by feline sarcoma viruses.) The latent period estimated
between natural virus infection and leukemia is estimated to be
2 to 3 years in cats that express virus and about 2 to 6 years in
cats that do not express virus (63, 66, 110). By contrast, induction
of antiviral immunity occurs within several weeks after infection
(64, 67).
Bovine leukemia virus-associated leukemias are never seen in animals
less than 2 years old and appear at a mean age of 6 years (16).
The only experimental bovine lymphosarcoma on record appeared 7
years (73) and some experimental ovine leukemias appeared 4 years
(75) after virus inoculation. By contrast, antibody to viral core
and envelope proteins appears 4 and 9 weeks after infection (73).
Experimental infection of gibbon apes generated leukemia after a
latent period of 1 year compared to only 2 weeks for the appearance
of antiviral immunity (16, 70).
The latent period for the development of human T-cell leukemia
in HTLV-1 positive cancers has been estimated at 5 to 10 years based
on the lag between the onset of leukemia and the first appearance
of antiviral antibodies of proviral DNA (13, 111, 112). More recently,
the latent period of HTLV-I has been raised to record heights of
30 (270) and 40 years (271). By contrast, the latent period of infection
and subsequent antiviral immunity was determined to be only 50 days
based on seroconversion of the recipients of HTLV-I-positive blood
transfusions (81).
The 5- to 40-year latencies claimed for leukemogenesis by HTLV-I
are perhaps the most bizarre efforts in linking a virus with a disease.
If correct this means either that an infected T-cell becomes leukemic
by the time it is 5 to 40 years old or that one of its offspring
becomes leukemic in the 50th to 500th generation,
assuming an average generation time of a month (176). Clearly the
role of the virus in such a process, if any, must be highly indirect.
Since all viral genes are essential for replication (13, 204), there
is nothing new that the virus could contribute after one round of
infection or 24 to 48 hours. This is specifically for HTLV-I and
bovine leukemia viruses which are biochemically inactive not only
during the long latent period but also during the lethal period
of the disease (Sections A and D).
The monumental discrepancies between the long latent periods from
6 months to 10 years for leukemogenesis compared to the short latent
periods of several weeks for virus replication or direct pathogenic
and immunogenic effects are unambiguous signals that the viruses
are not sufficient to initiate leukemia and other tumors (Fig. 1).
The viruses are fast and efficient immunogens or pathogens but are
either not or are highly indirect carcinogens.
Transformation in Vitro by HTLV-I in 30 to 60 days? Immortalization
of primary human lymphocytes infected by HTLV-I or ATLV or simian
retroviruses in vitro has been suggested to be equivalent to leukemogenic
transformation in vivo (13, 27, 113, 114). If correct, this would
be the only example of a retrovirus without onc genes capable of
malignant transformation in vitro. The assay infects about 5 x 10
(6th power) primary human lymphocytes with HTLV-I. However,
less than one of these cells survives the incubation period of 30
to 60 days, termed "crisis" because the resulting immortal
cells are monoclonal with regard to the proviral integration site
and because only 4 of 23 such experiments generate immortal cells
(115). Since no virus expression is observed during the critical
selection period of the immortal cell and since some immortalized
cells contain only defective proviruses (115), immortalization is
not a viral gene function. Further it is unlikely that the integration
site of the provirus (Sections E, G, and H) is relevant to the process
of immortalization, since different lines have different integration
sites (115). Indeed, spontaneous transformation or immortalization
of primary human lymphocytes has been reported applying this assay
to simian viruses (113). It follows that immortalization in culture
of cells infected by HTLV-I is an extremely rare, perhaps spontaneous
event.
There are several indications that in vitro immortalization and
leukemic transformation are different events and that both do not
depend on HTLV-I: (a) the latent period for immortalization is 30
to 60 days, while that of leukemogenesis is estimated to be 5 to
10 years; (b) in vitro immortalized cells are diploid (116), while
all leukemic cells have chromosome abnormalities (Section G); (c
) leukemic cells do not express virus (Section D) while immortalized
cells do (115); (d) cells that are clonal with regard to viral integration
sites are not necessarily leukemic, because normal T-lymphocytes
monoclonal with regard to HTLV-I integration were observed in 13
nonleukemic Japanese carriers (112); (e) finally immortalized cell
lines with defective viruses (115) or no viruses (113) indicate
that immortalization is a virus-independent, spontaneous event.
The evidence that cat, rat, and rabbit cells are immortalized, although
they are presumably insusceptible to the human virus (13), endorses
this view. It would appear that HTLV-I is directly involved neither
in immortalization nor in transformation (Sections A, B, G and H).
Instead the assay appears to be a direct measure of cell death of
human lymphocytes, due in part to HTLV-I-mediated fusion in vitro
(105, 106), and of rare spontaneous immortalization.
C. Tumor Resistance Genes That Inhibit Tumorigenesis but not
Virus Replication
If the virus were a direct and specific cause of tumori-genesis,
one would expect that all individuals who are permissive for infection
would also be permissive for viral tumors. However, this does not
appear to be so. For example certain inbred lines of chicken like
line 7 (117, 118) or line SC (35, 107) are highly susceptible to
induction of lymphoma-tosis by avian retroviruses, whereas line
151 (32, 119, 120) is highly susceptible to induction of erythroblastosis
by the same avian retroviruses. By contrast other lines like line
6 (118, 121), line FP (107), or line K28 (122) are either completely
or highly resistant to these leukemias but are just as susceptible
to virus infection and replication as the tumor-susceptible lines
(32, 117, 118, 122, 123). Indeed, both the lymphoma-susceptible
SC chickens and the resistant FP chickens develop early viremias
and hyperplastic B-cell follicles, but only 50% of the SC chickens
develop lymphomas (35, 36). Lymphoma resistance is dominant, indicating
that tumor suppressors are encoded (120, 124). The same genes also
appear to impart resistance to Rous sarcoma (124). By contrast resistance
to erythroblastosis is recessive (Section E).
Analogous tumor resistance genes have been observed in mouse strains.
For instance, resistance of C57BL mice to radiation leukemic virus-induced
leukemia (125) or of AKR X BALB/c mice to AKR virus-induced leukemia
(40) is controlled by the H-2D gene, which is dominant for resistance.
Inoculation of the virus into adult C57BL mice caused polyclonal
B- and T-cell hyperplasia from which most animals died after 4 to
5 months. However, no leukemia was observed (47). Clearly the tumor
resistance genes of the C57BL mice do not suppress virus replication
but apparently proliferation of transformed cells. Likewise the
SI and the Fv-2 genes of mice inhibit leukemogenesis but not replication
of Friend leukemia virus (13, 16, 126). The fates of DBA/2 and ST/b
mice inoculated neonatally with AKR virus are another example. After
expressing virus for at least 8 months (41), only ST/b mice show
a high incidence (about 80%) of leukemia between 8 and 12 months
of age, whereas DBA/2 mice show a lower incidence (about 30%) but
only at 2 to 3 years of age. Furthermore, not a single lymphomania
developed during a period of 1 year in chronically viremic CBA/N
mice, inoculated as newborns with Moloney leukemia virus, signalling
an absolute resistance to leukemogenesis (42, 46). By contrast,
about 90% of viremic AKR mice develop leukemia (40, 48). The wide
range of sucsceptibilities to virus-induced leukemia among different
mouse strains inoculated with AKR virus, as originally observed
by Gross (9), probably also reflects postinfection tumor resistance
genes in addition to genes conferring resistance to virus infection
and expression (16).
The over 100-fold variation (from less than 1% to 90%) in the incidence
of mammary carcinomas among mice that are susceptible to the mammary
tumor virus and also contain endogenous MMTVs also reflects host
genetic factors that govern resistance to tumori-genesis (16, 54,
55, 58, 127-129). One set of resistance genes governs virus expression,
as for example the sex of the host, because almost only females
secrete virus and develop tumors (13, 16). Another set governs resistance
to carcinogenesis because virus-induced hyperplasia does not necessarily
lead to mammary tumors (56, 57).
Resistance to tumorigenesis in animals which are permissive for
virus replication indicates that tumors contain nonviral, cellular
determinants or tumor antigens. Moreover defects of tumor resistance
genes rather than viral genes determine tumor specificity since
the nature of the tumor induced by a given virus depends on the
host and not on the virus. This lends new support to the conclusion
that viruses are not direct causes of tumorigenesis.
D. Tumors without Virus Expression, without Complete Viruses,
or without Viruses: Proof that Virus Is Not Necessary to Maintain
Transformation
If the retroviruses encode transformation-specific functions, one
would expect that viral genes are continuously expressed in viral
tumors. However, only 50% of virus-induced avian lymphomas express
viral RNA (130). In many clonal lymphomatoses of chickens only incomplete
or truncated proviruses are found. These defective proviruses lack
the 5' half of the genome and hence are unable to express any viral
gene (36, 50, 131, 132).
Moreover neither exogenous nor active endogenous retroviruses can
be detected in some lymphomas. One rare study that investigated
lymphomatosis in lymphomatosis virus-free chickens found that 10
of about 2000 (0.5%) chickens of line 7 died from lymphomas that
were indistinguishable from viral lymphomas at the ages of 6 to
18 months (49, 121). Thus the incidence of lymphoma in virus-free
chickens is very similar if not the same as that of chickens infected
by lymphomatosis virus with antiviral immunity (less than 1%) (Section
A). Since almost all chickens contain multiple endogenous retroviruses
(16, 133), it may be argued that these viruses were responsible
for the leukemias in animals free of exogenous virus. However, the
evidence that endogenous viruses were latent in leukemic as in nonleukemic
birds indicated that the endogenous retroviruses were not involved
in these spontaneous lymphomas (121). The existence of endogenous
viruses in the lymphatoma-resistant chickens of line 6 supports
this view (121, 133). In fact, it has been argued that endogenous
viruses protect by interference against infection by exogenous variants
(13, 16, 134).
A few cases of mouse T-cell lymphomas with defective leukemia viruses
have also been observed (135-137). These findings indicate that
murine leukemia can also be maintained without expression of retroviral
genes.
Expression of mammary tumor virus appears also not necessary to
maintain tumors, because no viral antigens (138) and no virus expression
are detectable in many virus-positive mammary tumors (9, 52, 139)
and because defective proviruses are observed in some tumors (140).
Moreover, in mice which lack mammary tumor virus altogether, mammary
tumors were observed that cannot be distinguished from virus-positive
tumors, indicating that the virus is not necessary to initiate mouse
mammary tumors (141). However, in the absence of virus expression,
mammary carcinomas develop at lower incidence and after longer latent
periods (9, 16, 52, 139-142).
Among virus-positive feline leukemias, some contain only defective
proviruses, as in the avian system (143-145). However, about 25
to 35% of all feline leukemias are free of virus, viral antigens
(67, 68, 110), and proviral DNA (143-145). This is significantly
higher than the percentage of virus-free avian lymphomas. In some
virus-free leukemias, the presumably lymphotropic virus is believed
to be in other cells of the cat (65).
In provirus-positive natural bovine and experimental ovine leukemias
expression neither of virus nor of viral RNA have been detected
(75, 146). This result is at odds with the proposal, based on in
vitro evidence, that the virus encodes a protein that activates
virus transcription and expression of latent cellular transforming
genes (147). In addition, the 5' half of bovine leukemia provirus
is absent from 25% of bovine leukemias (146, 148). This entirely
prevents expression of all viral genes. Other investigators have
described that 30% of bovine leukemias are virus free (72).
The proviruses of HTLV-I associated with human T-cell leukemias
are also consistently latent. For instance, no expression of viral
antigens (149) and no transcription of viral RNA are observed in
freshly isolated leukemic T-cells from (5 of 6) HTLV-I positive
patients with human T-cell leukemia (150, 151). Again, this is incompatible
with the in vitro evidence for a viral transcriptional activator
that was proposed to activate virus expression and expression of
latent cellular transforming genes (152, 153) (Section H). Moreover,
about 10% of the ATLV- or HTLV-I-positive adult T-cell leukemias
from Japan contain only defective viruses (77, 151, 154). Since
the 5' half of the viral genome was reported to be missing no viral
gene expression is possible (77, 151, 155). Further, a minority
of Japanese ATL patients appears to be free of ATLV, based on the
serological assays that are used to detect the virus (156, 157).
A recent analysis found 5 virus-free cases among 69 Japanese ATL
patients, who lacked both HTLV-I provirus and antiviral immunity
(158). Comparisons among T-cell leukemias in Italy found only 2
of 68 (159) or 3 of 16 (160) otherwise identical cases to be HTLV-I
positive. A survey from Hungary found 2 of 326 leukemias antibody
positive (161). Other studies from the United States and Italy describe
HTLV-I-free T-cell leukemias that share chromosome abnormalities
with viral leukemias (Section H). Thus, the ratio of nonviral to
viral T-cell leukemias in humans outside Japan appears to be even
higher than that of nonviral to viral feline and bovine leukemias.
Since retrovirus expression is not observed in many virus-positive
leukemias and since only defective viruses are associated with some
leukemias it follows that viral gene products are not necessary
to maintain these leukemias. These tumors must be maintained by
cellular genes (Section H). The occurrence of "viral"
leukemias of chicken, mice, cats, cattle, and humans despite antiviral
immunity (Section A) supports this conclusion. This conclusion is
also consistent with the evidence that about 30% of the natural
feline and bovine leukemias as well as many human and some avian
leukemias and murine mammary carcinomas are virus free, yet these
tumors cannot be distinguished from viral.
E. Transformation Not Dependent on Specific Proviral Integration
Sites
Since retroviruses without onc genes are not sufficient to cause
tumors and do not encode transformation-specific functions (Sections
A-C) but may nevertheless induce experimental tumors (Section A),
several hypothetical mechanisms of viral carcino-genesis have been
proposed that each require a specific interaction with the host
cell (Section H). One of these postulates is that retroviruses without
onc genes activate latent cellular cancer genes, termed proto-onc
genes, by site-specific proviral integration (13, 16, 130, 162).
The proposal is based on structural analogy with retroviral onc
genes, which are hybrids of sequences derived from retroviruses
and proto-onc genes (5, 19, 20). It is termed downstream promotion
hypothesis (130) because the promoter of the 3' long terminal repeat
from the provirus is thought to promote transcription of a proto-onc
gene downstream.
It is consistent with this hypothesis that leukemias and other
tumors from retrovirus-infected animals and humans are typically
all monoclonal with regard to the integration sites of the provirus
in the host chromosome. However, if one compares different monoclonal
tumors of the same cell lineage, different integration sites are
found in each individual tumor. This has been documented for retroviral
lymphomas of chickens (37, 131, 132), mice (13, 163, 164), cats
(143-145), cattle (146, 148), and humans (13, 151, 154, 155, 165)
and also for mammary tumors of mice (13). It is unlikely that the
mutant genes generated by provirus integrations are transforming
genes, because they are not specific and not known to have transforming
function upon transfection. Instead the clonal proviral integration
sites of individual tumors appear to be the consequence of clonal
proliferation of a single transformed cell from which the clonal
tumor originated (Section G).
Relevance of Preferred Integration Regions. Although the
search for specific proviral integration sites in viral tumors has
met with no success, preferred integration regions were observed
in three systems, namely in erythro-blastoses and lymphomas of chicken
strains predisposed to these tumors and in mammary tumors of mice
bred for susceptibility to this tumor (13, 16). For instance in
erythroblastosis-prone 15I chickens that suffer 80% erythroblastosis
upon infection (120), integration upstream of proto-erb was observed
in 90% (119) and 45% (120, 122) of erythroblastoses. Proto-erb is
a proto-onc gene because it is the cellular progenitor of the transforming
gene of avian erythroblastosis virus (13, 19). This region-specific
integration appears to activate proto-erb transcription compared
to certain normal controls (119). However, there are as yet no data
on activation of proto-erb translation in leukemic cells. Unexpectedly
45% of the erythroblastoses observed in 15I chickens contained viruses
with transduced proto-erb (122). The outstanding yield of proto-erb
transductions in this line of chicken compared to others (5, 19)
(Section H) suggests an altered proto-erb gene, perhaps already
flanked by defective proviral elements which would permit transduction
via homologous recombination. It is consistent with this view that
in 15I chickens susceptibility in erythroblastosis is dominant (120),
while typically resistance to tumors is dominant in chickens and
mice (Section C).
Further in about 85% of the viral lymphomas of lymphoma-prone chicken
lines (Section C) transcription of the proto-myc gene is activated
compared to certain controls (130). Proto-myc is a proto-onc gene
because it is the cellular progenitor of the transforming genes
of four avian carcinomas viruses, MC29, MH2, CMII, and OK10 (5,
13, 19). Transcriptional myc activation ranges from 300- to 500-fold
in some lymphoma lines (RP) to 30-to 100-fold in most primary lymphomas
(85%) down to undetectable levels in a few (6%) primary lymphomas
(130). However, the activation of proto-myc translation, compared
to normal fibroblasts, was estimated as only 7-fold in one RP lymphoma
line and even lower in three other lines (166). Assuming that the
same ratios of transcriptional to translational activation apply
to all lymphomas, activation of myc translation would be only 1-
to 2-fold in most lymphomas, hardly enough to explain carcinogenesis.
In 5 to 15% of the lymphomas there is no detectable transcriptional
activation of proto-myc and the retroviruses appear to be integrated
outside of and in random orientation relative to the proto-myc genes
(50, 105, 130, 132, 167, 168, 169).
Thus, in lymphomas, proto-myc transcription is frequently but not
always activated whereas proto-myc translation appears to be barely,
if at all activated. It is not known whether translation of proto-erb
is activated in viral erythroblastoses. By contrast viral myc and
erb genes are efficiently translated in all virus-transformed cells
(5, 13, 16, 19, 20). Moreover in contrast to the hypothetical lymphoma
specificity of activated proto-myc, viral myc genes typically cause
carcinomas and viral erb genes cause sarcomas in addition to erythroblastosis
(5, 13).
Integration of mostly intact murine leukemia viruses into or upstream
of proto-myc is also observed in mouse and rat lymphomas. But since
it occurs only in 10 (170, 171) to 65% (172) of the cases analyzed,
it is not necessary for lymphoma-genesis. Moreover provirus integration
near murine proto-myc is also not sufficient for leukemogenesis.
Virus integrated near proto-myc was found in 15% of the hyperplastic
thymus colonies of AKR mice that appeared 35 days after infection
with MCF virus. These colonies were not tumorigenic (172). However,
more malignant lymphomas develop from cells with provirus integrated
near myc than from other cells, because in 65% of the lymphomas
virus was integrated in proto-myc.
There are also preferred regions of provirus integration for MMTV
in carcinomas of mice, termed int-1 in C3H mice and int-2 in BR6
mice (13, 16). The int loci or genes are considered to be proto-onc
genes only because they are preferred MMTV integration sites. They
have not been progenitors of viral onc genes and there is no direct
evidence that they can be activated to cellular cancer genes. Moreover
transcriptional activation of int is observed only in some tumors
(173) and there is no evidence for viral-int hybrid mRNAs (140).
It is also not known whether the int loci are coding. The two int
loci are totally unrelated to each other and map on different chromosomes
(174). Integration within the int regions is neither site nor orientation
specific with regard to the int loci (13). Integration at int loci
is also not necessary for carcino-genesis, because integration in
int-1 is found in only a fraction (22 of 26) of C3H tumors (173)
and in int-2 only in a fraction (22 of 45) of BR6 tumors (140).
Further integration in int-1 was found in benign hyperplastic nodules
that did not become malignant, proving that it is also not sufficient
for carcinogenesis (56, 57).
The hypothesis that region-specific integration generates hybrid
transforming genes that are equivalent to viral onc genes is inadequate
on several counts. (a) Region-specific integration is not necessary
for transformation, because in most systems (human, bovine, feline)
it is not observed and in all others it is not obligatory. (b) It
is also not sufficient for carcinogenesis based on the particular
cases of clonal murine leukemia virus integration into proto-myc
that did not cause leukemia (172), clonal MMTV integration into
int-1 that did not cause mammary carcinomas (56, 57), and monoclonal
HTLV-I infections that did not cause T-cell leukemia (112). The
non-leukemic proto-myc integration is incompatible with the model
purporting that activated proto-myc is like the inevitably transforming
viral myc genes (5). The prediction that native proviral-cell DNA
hybrids have transforming function, like the related retroviral
onc gene models, is unconfirmed. Attempts to demonstrate transforming
function of proviral-proto-myc hybrids from chicken lymphomas were
negative but led to a DNA with transforming function termed B-lym
(13, 175). A plausible reason is that the myc RNAs initiated from
upstream viral promoters are poor mRNAs because they start with
intron sequences that are not part of normal mRNA and cannot be
spliced out, since there is no splice donor downstream of the 3'
viral long terminal repeat (Section H). (d) The prediction that
the probability of all infected cells to become transformed should
be the same as that of region-specific integration is also unconfirmed
on the basis of the following calculations (5). The proto-myc, -erb,
or int regions that are preferential proviral landing sites in viral
tumors measure about 2 and 40 kilobases, respectively (13). Since
the chicken chromosome contains about 1 x 10 (6th power)
kilobases and the mouse chromosome contains about 3 x 10 (6th
power) kilobases, and since provirus integration is random (13,
16), about 2 in 10 (6th power) or 1 in 10 (5th
power) infections should generate a tumor cell, if region-specific
integration were the mechanism of carcinogenesis. Yet the probability
that an infected cell will initiate an monoclonal tumor is only
about 10 (-11th power) (Section F). In addition, the
latent period of tumorigenesis would be expected to be short because
there are at least 10 (8th power) target cells of the
respective lineages and many more viruses to infect them (Section
F). Moreover, given the long latent periods of carcinogenesis, polyclonal
rather than monoclonal tumors would be expected from integrational
carcinogenesis. It may be argued that this discrepancy reflects
the work of tumor resistance genes. However, postinfection resistance
genes that suppress tumor formation by the viral derivatives of
proto-myc or erb, like MC29 or avian erythro-blastosis virus, have
never been observed in vivo or in vitro. Clearly, since tumor resistance
genes do not function in vitro it would be expected that at least
2 of 10 (6th power) cells infected in vitro would be
transformed by activation of proto-myc and 2 by activation of proto-erb.
However, no transformation by leukemia viruses has ever been observed
in vitro (Section B).
In view of this, it is more likely that region-specific integration
may provide proliferative advantages to hyperplastic cells or may
initiate hyperplasia by activating or inactivating growth control
genes rather than being the cause of malignancy. This proposal predicts
that integration into proto-myc and proto-erb precedes tumorigenesis
(Fig. 1).
It is inconsistent with this proposal that murine leukemia virus
integration into proto-myc (172) and MMTV integration into int-1
(56, 57) occur prior to carcinogenesis and thus are not sufficient
for carcinogenesis. This proposal predicts also that the chicken
lines that are susceptible to lymphoma or erythro-blastosis lack
genes that check hyperplasia of lymphocytes or erythroblasts. It
is consistent with this view that the same retroviruses cause either
lymphomatosis or erythroblastosis or no tumors in different chicken
lines. The exclusive (but not absolute) usage of only one of two
different int loci by MMTV, namely int-1 in carcinomas of C3H mice
and int-2 in BR6 mice, is also more likely to reflect strain-specific
activation or inactivation of proliferative controls than two entirely
different transforming genes that would nevertheless generate indistinguishable
carcinomas.
F. The Probability That a Virus-infected Cell Will Become Transformed
Is Only 10 (-11th power)
To calculate the probability that a virus-infected cell will become
transformed, we must consider the ratio of symptomatic to asymptomatic
carriers, the clonality of the viral tumors, and the long latent
periods of oncogenesis. (a) The ratio of symptomatic to asymptomatic
carriers with latent infections and antiviral immunity averages
less than 10 (-3rd power) (Section A), but that of viremic
animals susceptible to transformation may reach 0.9 (Section C).
(b) Since monoclonal tumors emerge from at least 10 (8th
power) B- or T-cells (176), the probability of an infected cell
in an animal to become the progenitor of a clonal leukemia is only
about 10 (-8th power). This calculation assumes that
all of these cells are infected. This is certainly true for the
mice that carry AKR virus, radiation leukemia virus (82), or inducible
mammary tumor virus (75, 142) in their germ line, and is probably
the case in congenitally infected viremic chickens, cats, gibbons,
and mice (12, 16, 31, 39, 63, 66, 70). In fact in viremic animals,
the hyperplastic effect of the virus would have enhanced the number
of prospective tumor cells to at least 10 (9th power)
(Sections A and B). Even if only a fraction of susceptible cells
are infected in animals or humans with latent infections and antiviral
immunity, the number of infected cells per host is estimated to
be at least 10 (6th power) to account for the immune
response (Section B, and Refs. 13, 16, 27, 31, and 63) or the proviruses
that are used to diagnose latent virus infection (Section D). Proviruses
cannot be detected biochemically unless they are present in at least
1 of 100 cells. © Finally, the probability of an infected cell
to become transformed in an animal is a function of the number of
generations of infected cells that occur during the latent period
of the disease. Given latent periods of 6 to 120 months (Section
B) and assuming an average life span of 1 month for a susceptible
B- or T-cell (176), about 10 to 100 generations of infected cells
are required to generate the one transformed cell from which a clonal
tumor emerges. The corresponding probability that a generation of
cells will develop a clonal tumor would be 10 (-1 power) to 10 (-2
power). Considering the proliferative effect of the virus on hemopoietic
target cells in viremic animals, this may again be a conservative
estimate. Indeed, a mitotic rate of 1 day has been assumed for B-cells
of lymphoma-tosis virus-infected chickens (177).
Thus the probability that a virus-infected, hemopoietic cell will
become transformed in an individual with a latent infection and
antiviral immunity is about 10 (-3 power) x 10 (-6th
power) x 10 (-2 power) = 10 (-11th power), and that in
a viremic individual without tumor resistance genes is about the
same, namely 0.9 x 10 (-9th power) x 10 (-2nd
power) = 10 (-11th power). Therefore the increased risk
of viremic animals to develop leukemia must be a direct consequence
of the hyperplasia of prospective tumor cells (Section A) (Fig.
1). In tumor-resistant animals the probability that the infected
cell will become transformed may be the same, but the resistance
genes would prevent proliferation of the transformed cells (Section
C and H). The apparent probability that virus-infected, non-hemopoietic
cells will become transformed must be lower in both susceptible
and resistant animals, because the incidence of solid tumors is
much lower than that of leukemia (9, 32).
G. Clonal Chromosome Abnormalities Are the Only Transformation-Specific
Markers of Retrovirus-infected Tumor Cells: Causes of Transformation?
The evidence that viral tumors are monoclonal (Section E) and that
leukemogenesis by retroviruses (without onc genes) is highly dependent
on tumor resistance genes, which are different from genes that determine
susceptibility to the virus, suggest virus-independent steps in
carcinogenesis (Section C). Indeed clonal chromosome abnormalities
of virus-positive mammalian tumors provide direct evidence for cellular
events that may be necessary for carcinogenesis. (Avian cells have
not been studied because of their complex chromosome structure.)
For example, trisomies of chromosomes 15 have been observed frequently
in viral T-cell leukemias of mice (16). In addition translocations
between chromosomes 15, 17, and others have been recorded (108,
178-180, 272). In mammary carcinomas of mice, a chromosome 13 trisonomy
was observed in 15 of 15 cases including inbred GR and C3H mice
(which contain MMTV) and outbred Swiss mice (which probably also
contain the virus) (181). Clonal chromosome abnormalities have also
been observed in 30 of 34 bovine leukemias induced by bovine leukemia
virus (75). A recent cytogenetic analysis of human adult T-cell
leukemias (ATL) from Japan showed that 10 of 11 cases had an inversion
or translocation of chromosome 14 (183). Rearrangements of other
chromosomes have been detected in 6 of 6 (184), 12 of 13 (116),
and 8 of 9 cases of HTLV-I-positive leukemias (185). Thus over 90%
of virus-positive T-cell leukemias have chromosome abnormalities.
A survey of all viral T-cell leukemias analyzed shows rearrangements
of chromosome 14 in 26% and of chromosome 6 in 29% (186, 187).
The chromosome abnormalities of these viral leukemias and carcinomas
are as yet the only known determinants that set apart transformed
from normal virus-infected cells. Since the chromosome abnormalities
are clonal, the origin of the tumor must have coincided with the
origin of the chromosome abnormality. Therefore chromosome abnormalities
or closely associated events must be directly relevant to initiation
of tumorigenesis. They could either be, or coincide with, a single
step mechanism of transformation or with one of several steps in
transformation, as postulated in the case of the Philadelphia chromosome
(188). It is consistent with this view that chromosome abnormalities
are found in all virus-infected tumors analyzed.
However, heterogeneity among the karyotypes of individual human
or murine leukemias of the same lineage (16, 179, 182, 189, 190,
272) and thus heterogeneity of mutation support the view that chromosome
abnormalities are coincidental with rather than causal for transformation.
Yet this view does not take into consideration that together with
the microscopic alterations, other submicroscopic mutations may
have occurred that could have initiated the disease (108). It is
consistent with this view that tumor cells contain in addition to
microscopic karyotype changes submicroscopic deletions, detectable
as restriction enzyme site polymorphisms (191). Some of these mutations
may be functionally equivalent to the truncation-recombination mechanism
that activates the docile proto-onc genes of normal cells to the
onc genes of directly oncogenic retroviruses (5, 192). Thus specific
karyotypic changes may only be the tip of the iceberg of multiple
chromosomal mutations, referred to as "genequake," [G.
Matioli, personal communication] which must have occurred in the
same cell. One or several of these could have initiated the tumor.
Chromosome recombination sites are also postulated to be cellular
transforming genes of virus-negative tumors, as for example in Burkitt's
lymnphoma (5) or in human leukemia with the Philadelphia chromosome
(193).
If chromosomal abnormalities are necessary for transformation of
cells infected by retroviruses without onc genes, chromosomal abnormalities
would not be expected in tumors caused by retroviruses with directly
transforming onc genes. This has indeed been confirmed for tumors
caused in mice by Rous sarcoma virus (194) or by Abelson leukemia
virus (195) which have normal karyotypes (Table 1).
The clonality of retrovirus-positive tumors is then defined in
two different ways: by a retroviral integration site (see Section
E), and by a chromosome abnormality (see Fig. 1). Each of these
two clonal chromosome alterations could then mark the origin of
the tumor, while the other must have pre-existed. Since the tumors
originate late after infection and probably from a virus-infected,
normal cell, the clonal retroviral integration site would appear
to be a direct consequence of clonal proliferation of a cell transformed
by a chromosome alteration. Indeed chromosome abnormalities are
typical of tumor cells but not of virus-infected normal cells. This
view is consistent with the evidence that retrovirus integration
does not cause transformation and that transformation is not dependent
on specific integration sites. It is also highly improbable that
chromosome abnormalities are caused by the virus, because they are
not found in virus-infected normal cells and because they are also
characteristic of virus-negative tumors (Section H). The clonal
retroviral integration sites in viral tumors the chromosomes of
which have not been analyzed, as for example avian, feline, and
simian leukemias, may indeed signal as yet undetected clonal chromosome
abnormalities.
Virus-independent Transformation in Virus-positive and -negative
Tumors
Several hypotheses postulate that retroviruses play a direct role
in carcinogenesis. One reason is that viruses, seemingly consistent
with Koch's first postulate, are associated with tumors although
frequently in a latent or defective form. In addition it appears
consistent with Koch's third postulate that experimental infections
with retroviruses may induce leukemia under certain conditions (see
Sections B and C). However, none of these hypotheses provide an
adequate explanation for the fact that retroviruses are not sufficient
to initiate (Sections A to C) and not necessary to maintain (Sections
D and E) transformation and do not encode a transformation-specific
function. Moreover none of these hypotheses can explain why transformation
is initiated with a clonal chromosome abnormality (Section G) and
why tumor specificity is determined by the host rather than the
virus (Sections C and E). The short-comings of three of these hypotheses
are briefly reviewed here.
1. The Oncogene Hypothesis. Huebner (8) and others (9, 82)
have postulated that retroviruses (without onc genes) are direct
carcinogens that include oncogenes, hence the term "oncogene
hypothesis" (8). The hypothesis was based on abundant positive
correlations between retrovirus expression and cancer incidence
in laboratory mice and domestic chickens, which indeed suggested
direct viral etiology in apparent accord with Koch's third postulate.
The hypothesis generalized that either import of retroviruses from
without, or activation of latent viruses from within, is the direct
cause of spontaneous, chemically induced, or physically induced
tumors (8, 9, 82). However, the hypothesis failed to account for
the long latent periods of oncogenesis and for complete tumor resistance
by certain animals that are highly susceptible to the virus and
for host genes that would determine tumor specificity (Section C).
Above all the hypothesis failed to account for the monoclonality
and the chromosome abnormalities of the resulting tumors.
2. The Hypothesis That Latent Cellular Cancer Genes Are Activated
by Provirus Integration. This hypothesis has been introduced
in Section E. It holds that retroviruses act as direct, albeit inefficient
carcinogens by generating hybrid transforming genes from proviruses
joint with cellular proto-onc genes. Excepting the specific cases
described in Section E, this mechanism makes four clear predictions,
namely: (a) that different transforming genes exist in each tumor,
because each has a different proviral integration site (Section
E); (b) that therefore a large number of tumor resistance genes
exist in tumor-resistant animals (Section C); (c ) that provirus-cell
hybrid genes are expressed to maintain transformation; and (d) that
virus-transformed cells exist without chromosome abnormalities,
analogous to cells transformed by retroviruses with onc genes (Section
G).
None of these predictions is confirmed, (a) Contrary to the expectation
for many different transforming genes, all virus-positive tumors
of a given lineage are phenotypically highly uniform (Section A).
Even virus-free tumors are indistinguishable from virus-positive
tumors of the same lineage only by the presence of viruses. Examples
are the identical pathologies and pathogeneses of viral and nonviral
murine leukemias (196-198), chicken B-cell lymphomas (121), human
T-cell leukemias (158, 161, 186), and mouse mammary tumors (11,
139, 141, 142) (Section D). (b) Contrary to expectation only a small
set of cellular resistance genes controls the development of viral
tumors in chicken or mice (13, 16) (Section C). Moreover apparently
the same resistance genes of chickens of line 6 suppress viral and
nonviral lymphomas, and even lymphomas induced by Marek's virus
(124). By contrast chickens of line 7 that lack these genes are
equally susceptible to both (121) (Section D). Mice provide parallel
examples such as in the CBA strain, which is resistant to spontaneous
(9) as well as to viral (46) leukemia (Section C). (c ) Contrary
to expectation for virus-cell hybrid transforming genes, proviruses
are latent or defective and biochemically inactive in many animal
and all bovine and human leukemias (Section D). (d) Contrary to
expectation for viral carcinogenesis all virus-positive murine,
bovine, and human tumors analyzed have chromosome abnormalities.
Further, similar chromosome abnormalities in viral and nonviral
tumors again suggest common cellular transforming genes. For instance,
the same chromosome 15 trisomy is observed in murine leukemias induced
by viruses, chemicals, or radiation (180, 190, 199-201, 272). In
addition virus-positive and virus-free human T-cell leukemias have
common abnormalities in chromosomes 14 and 16 (160, 183, 186, 187,
189, 202, 203). Since all human T-cell leukemias and all bovine
leukemias have chromosome abnormalities but not all are infected
by viruses (Sections D and G), it would appear more likely that
the viruses are coincidental passengers rather than causes of the
disease.
3. The Hypothesis That Latent Cellular Cancer Genes Are trans-Activated
by Viral Proteins. This hypothesis postulates that certain retroviruses
directly activate latent cellular transforming genes with a specific
viral protein. This has been proposed for bovine leukemia virus
and human HTLV-I based on in vitro models (147, 152, 153) (see Section
D). However, the hypothesis is unlikely for the following reasons.
Since the putative trans-activation protein of HTLV-I is essential
for replication (204), all cells in which the virus replicates would
expect to be transformed. This is clearly not the case. Further
this gene cannot be relevant for transformation since bovine and
human leukemias in particular do not express viral RNA or protein
or cannot express RNA or protein because of defective proviruses
(Section D). In addition this hypothesis also fails to account for
the chromosome abnormalities found in all bovine and human leukemias
(Section G). Finally both the proviral insertion and the transactivation
hypotheses fail to explain the inevitably long latent periods of
viral tumori-genesis (Section B).
Therefore it is proposed that transformation is a virus-independent
event that must be due to cellular genes (Fig. 1). These genes would
be generated by chromosomal mutations for which chromosome abnormalities
are a macroscopic indicator. This explains the clonal chromosome
abnormalities that could not be predicted by any of the virus-cancer
hypotheses. In a given lineage of cells the number of cellular genes
convertible to transforming genes must be limited since they cause
highly uniform tumors which can be suppressed by a small set of
resistance genes.
Retrovirus-independent transformation resolves the apparent paradox
that tumors occur very seldom in typical natural infections of wild
animals and humans, and then only long after infection, and despite
viral latency and antiviral immunity. It is also consistent with
virus-independent transformation that the probability that an individual
virus-infected cell will become transformed is only 10 (-11th
power) and that this probability is the same in a viremic chicken
with a virus-induced hyperplasia, as in a normal chicken with a
latent infection and antiviral immunity (Section F). The low probability
of virus-independent transformation also explains directly why cells
infected by retroviruses are not transformed in culture, namely
because not enough cells can be maintained for a long enough time
to observe spontaneous transformation. Virus-independent transformation
is also compatible with tumor resistance genes that do not inhibit
viral replication or growth of normal virus-infected cells. In addition
it is consistent with the notion that defects of cellular resistance
genes rather than viral genes determine tumor specificity (Section
C).
The role of the virus in tumorigenesis is then limited to the induction
of hyperplasia by activating cellular proliferative functions either
from within or from without via viral antigens or virus-induced
growth factors (13, 16, 46). For this purpose the virus must be
expressed at a high titer or it must have infected a large number
of cells, if insertional mutagenesis of proliferative genes were
involved (Section E). This may be similar to the mechanism whereby
DNA viruses induce transformation, as for example Epstein-Barr virus
which is thought to induce Burkitt's lymphoma. Exactly like their
retroviral counterparts, all Burkitt's lymphomas have chromosome
abnormalities but not all contain the virus (5). Thus the role of
the retrovirus in carcinogenesis is as indirect as that of chemical
or physical carcinogens.
Alternatively a latent retrovirus may itself be subject to activation
by physical, chemical, or spontaneous events that can induce hyperplasis
and cancer (8, 12, 82) (Fig. 1). The physically activated radiation
leukemia virus (82) or the chemically activated endogenous retroviruses
of mice or chickens (12, 16) are examples. It is uncertain whether
under these conditions the retrovirus is just an indicator or an
intermediate of proliferative activations that may lead to carcinogenesis
because comparable studies with virus-free strains of animals are
not available. The physically or chemically inducible phages or
herpes viruses may in turn be models for this (11, 83).
Little is known about the nature of the hyperplastic cell. The
existence of viral hyperplasias in tumor-resistant animals indicates
that the hyperplastic cell is not neoplastic (Section C). Most hyperplastic
cells are polyclonal with regard to proviral integration sites (118)
and are likely to have a normal karyotype, as has been shown in
some cases (47) (Section C). Hyperplastic cells with normal karyotypes
have also been observed as precursors of radiation leukemia in mice
(205). Nevertheless the evidence for clonality with regard to a
proviral integration site in T-cell hyperplasias (172) and mammary
hyperplasias (56, 57) of mice and in T-cells of healthy humans (112)
indicates clonal, possibly virus-induced alterations that are not
sufficient for carcinogenesis. One could speculate then that hyperplastic
cells fall into two classes, those which respond to viral antigens
delivered from within or without (42) and those which respond to
growth control genes altered by provirus integration (Section E).
Notable exceptions to virus-independent transformations are infections
that generate retroviral transforming genes. However, the probability
of generating a retrovirus with an onc gene is clearly much lower
than integration into a cellular gene (10 (-6th power),
Section E) and even significantly lower than virus-independent transformation
(10 (-11th power), Section F) (273). Only about 50 such
viral isolates have been recorded in history (5, 13, 19). (The frequent
erb transductions from the chicken 15I line are an exception to
this rule (Section E).) The generation of these viruses requires
two rare illegitimate recombinations to transduce a transformation-specific
sequence from a cell into a retrovirus vector (5, 19, 20, 273).
However, one illegitimate recombination that unites the 5' promoter,
translational start sequence, and splice donor of a retrovirus with
a transformation-specific sequence from a cellular proto-onc gene
would be enough to generate a functional virus-cell recombinant
onc gene that cannot be replicated. Tumors caused by such genes
are presently unknown. They will be harder to diagnose but are probably
more frequent than the rare, natural tumors containing complete
retroviruses with onc genes (273).
This raises the question of why orthodox integration of a provirus
within a proto-onc gene, like proto-myc, is not observed to transform
infected cells in vivo or in vitro with the predicted probability.
Based on the calculations described in Section E, this probability
should be about 1 in 10 (4th power) considering that
about 20 proto-onc genes are known from 20 viral onc genes (5, 13,
19). A possible answer is that proviruses abutting proto-onc genes
from the proviral ends rather than from within, as in viral onc
genes (273), provide neither new downstream translational starts
nor splice donors for those coding regions of the proto-onc genes
that are separated from their native start signals by the inserted
provirus. Nevertheless they can provide efficient downstream promoters
(130) of RNAs that may not be translatable.
I. Are Retroviruses a Basis for Cancer Prediction, Prevention,
or Therapy?
In assessing the tumor risk of a retrovirus-infected animal or
human, latent infections must be clearly seperated from chronic,
acute, or viremic infections. The control of virus expression in
a given host is a product of three factors: the virus; the host
cell; and the animal. The viral factor is defined by viral genes
and promotors (13, 16, 206). The cellular factor is defined by genes
that encode viral receptors and unknown suppressors (8, 9, 11-13,
16-18, 82). The animal factor is defined by antiviral immunity.
By far the most common natural retrovirus infections are latent,
chronic infections that persist in animals and humans in the presence
of antiviral immunity presumably only in a limited number of cells
(38, 40, 90, 207). The leucemia risk of this statistically most
relevant group of natural infections avarages about less than 0.1%
in different animal species (Section A). It is possibly the same
as, but certainly not much higher than, that of uninfected controls
(Sections A and D). Thus latent viruses offer no targets for tumor
prevention. The low probability that an immunocompetent individual
will develop chronic viremia and hence leukemia also suggests that
retroviruses carrying therapeutic genes are not a significant risk
as leukemogens.
By contrast the leukemia risk of a viremic animal that survives
the early pathogenic effects of the infection (Section B) can be
high barring tumor-resistance genes (Section A and C). It ranges
between 0 and 90% in different lines of chicken or strains of inbred
mice and avarages about 30% in domestic cats. However, outside the
laboratory chronic viremias are very rare and have never been recorded
in humans. They result either from congenital infections in the
absence of maternal antibody (Section A) or from rare, native immunodeficiency
(66).
Thus a predictable tumor risk depends entirely on high virus expression
and virus-induced hyperplasia. This risk can be reduced or prevented
by limiting or blocking lymphoblast hyperplasia as for example by
bursectomy or thymectomy (Section A). Alternatively, inoculation
of newborn AKR mice with antiviral antibody was observed to suppress
viremia and subsequent leukemia in 68% (208). It would appear more
practical, however, to breed or select animals with genes that confer
resistance either to the virus or tumorigenesis or both.
Above all, neither active nor latent viruses offer targets for
tumor therapy, since tumors are not maintained and are not directly
initiated by viral genes, and also occur despite active antiviral
immunity.
Clearly the cell is the more complex variable in the as yet poorly
defined interaction between retroviruses and cells that leads to
hyperplasia and than carcinogenesis. In view of the evidence for
cellular genes that determine resistance to hyperplasia and tumorgenesis,
further progress in understanding and treating virus-induced cancer
will depend on identifying cellular determinants of carcinogenesis
and the function of hyperplasia and tumor resistance genes.
II. Retroviruses and AIDS
The isolation in 1983 of a retrovirus from a human patient with
lymphoadenopathy, a typical symptom of AIDS, led to the proposal
that the virus, now termed lymphadenopathy-associated virus, is
the cause of AIDS (26). Related viruses, termed HTLV-III, ARV, or
HIV (209), have since been isolated from about one-half of the AIDS
patients that have been sampled (210-214). In the United States
about 26,000 AIDS cases and 15,000 AIDS fatalities have been reported
between 1981, when the disease was first identified (215), and October
1986 (216). Women represent only 7% of the AIDS cases in the United
States (216). The number of AIDS cases reported in the United States
has increased from about 100 per 6-month period in 1981 to about
5,000 during the last three 6-month periods from January 1985 (216).
At the same time the case fatality rate has declined from a high
of 88% in 1981 to 32% in 1986 (216). In absolute numbers the known
deaths have declined from a high of 2,600 in the first 6 months
of 1985 to 1,800 in the first 6 months of 1986. This suggests either
that the virulence of the disease is dropping or that other diseases
were diagnosed as AIDS. Recently the virus was also suggested to
cause disease of the brain and of the nervous system (230, 255,
268, 274) and lymphoid interstitial pneumonia (275).
Antibody to the virus is found in about 90% of AIDS patients and
correlates with chronic latent infection by the virus (217-221).
Because of the nearly complete correlation between AIDS and immunity
against the virus, the virus is generally assumed to be the cause
of AIDS (13, 27). Accordingly, detection of antiviral antibody,
rather than virus, is now most frequently used to diagnose AIDS
and those at risk for AIDS (27, 217-224). This is paradoxical, since
serum antibody from AIDS patients neutralizes AIDS virus (225-227)
and since antiviral immunity or vaccination typically protects against
viral disease. It is even more paradoxical that a low antibody titer
is equated with a low risk for AIDS (228, 229).
Unlike all other retroviruses, AIDS viruses are thought to be direct
pathogens that kill their host cells, namely T-lymphocytes (13,
27), and possibly cells of the brain (230, 255). This view is compatible
with the phenotype of AIDS, the hallmark of which is a defect in
T-cells (13, 27, 215), and with experimental evidence that many
but not all viral isolates induce cytopathic fusion of T-lymphocytes
under certain conditions in vitro (Section D). Further it is incompatible
with neurological disease (231, 232, 255). However, cell killing
is incompatible with the obligatory requirement of mitosis for retrovirus
replication (16, 25) and with the complete absence of cytocidal
effects in all asymptomatic infections in vivo (Section D).
A. Infections with No Risk and Low Risk for AIDS Indicate That
the Virus Is Not Sufficient to Cause AIDS
Since their original discoveries in AIDS patients, the virus and
more frequently antibody to the virus have also been demonstrated
in a large group of asymptomatic persons (212, 214). The virus has
been estimated to occur in about 1 to 2 x 10 (6th power)
or about 0.5 to 1% of all Americans (223, 224). In the United States
persons at high risk for infection include promiscuous homosexual
and bisexual men, of whom 17 to 67% are antibody positive; intravenous
drug users, of whom 50 to 87% are positive; and hemophiliacs, of
whom 72 to 85% are positive according to some studies (13, 218,
223). On the basis of this particular epidemiology, it was concluded
that the virus is not transmitted as cell-free agent like pathogenic
viruses but only by contacts that involve exchange of cells (13,
27).
In these virus-infected groups the annual incidence of AIDS was
found to average 0.3% (224) and to reach peak values of 2 to 5%
(218, 223, 233). However even in these groups there are many more
asymptomatic than symptomatic virus carriers.
Other infected groups appear to be at no risk for AIDS. In Haiti
and in certain countries in Africa antibody-positive individuals
range from 4 to 20% of the population, whereas the incidence of
AIDS is estimated at less than 0.01% (223, 229, 234). Several reports
describe large samples of children from Africa who were 20 (228)
to 60% (221) antibody positive and of female prostitutes who were
66 to 80% antibody positive (221, 235), yet none of these had AIDS.
Among male homosexuals and hemophiliacs of Hungary about 5% are
AIDS virus positive, yet no symptoms of AIDS were recorded (161).
Among native male and female Indians of Venezuela 3.3 to 13.3% have
antiviral immunity, but none have symptoms of AIDS (236). Since
these Indians are totally isolated from the rest of the country,
in which only one hemophiliac was reported to be virus positive
(236), the asymptomatic nature of their infections is not likely
to be a consequence of a recent introduction of the virus into their
population. Thus it is not probable that these infections will produce
AIDS after the average latent period of 5 years (Section B).
Since the percentage of virus carriers with symptoms of AIDS is
low and in particular since it varies between 0 and 5% depending
on the AIDS risk group of the carrier, it is concluded that the
virus is not sufficient to cause AIDS and that it does not encode
an AIDS-specific function. The virus is also not sufficient to cause
neurological disease, since it has been detected in the brains of
persons without neurological disease and of healthy persons who
had survived transient meningitis (230-232).
Thus the virus appears only rarely compatible with Koch's third
postulate as an etiological agent of AIDS. It may be argued that
the asymptomatic infections reflect latent infections or infections
of only a small percentage of susceptible cells, compared to presumably
acute infections with symptoms of AIDS. However, it is shown in
Section C that infections of neither symptomatic nor asymptomatic
carriers are acute; instead both are equally latent and limited
to a small percentage of susceptible cells.
Further the observations that some virus carriers are at high and
others at essentially no risk for AIDS directly argue for a cofactor
(218, 237) or else for a different cause for AIDS. The strong bias
against women, because only 2.5% (479 of 17,000 cases) of the sexually
transmitted AIDS cases in the United States are women (216), is
a case in point. The virus-positive but AIDS-negative children and
prostitutes of Africa (221) or Indians from Venezuela (236) are
other examples.
B. Long Latent Period of AIDS Incompatible with Short Latent
Period of Virus Replication
The eclipse period of AIDS virus replication in cell culture is
on the order of several days, very much like that of other retroviruses
(238). In humans virus infection of a sufficient number of cells
to elicit an antibody response appears to take less than 4 to 7
weeks. This estimate is based on an accidental needle-stick infection
of a nurse, who developed antibody 7 weeks later (239), and on reports
describing 12 (240) and 1 (232) cases of male homosexuals who developed
antibody 1 to 8 weeks after infection. During this period a mononucleosis-like
illness associated with transient lymphoadenopathy was observed.
In contrast to AIDS (see below), this illness appeared 1 to 8 weeks
after infection and lasted only 1 to 2 weeks until antiviral immunity
was established. The same early mononucle-osis-like disease, associated
with lymphocyte hyperplasia, was observed by others in primary AIDS
virus infections (234). This is reminiscent of the direct, early
pathogenic effects observed in animals infected with retroviruses
prior to the onset of antiviral immunity (Part I, Section B).
By contrast the lag between infection and the appearance of AIDS
is estimated from transfusion-associated AIDS to be 2 to 7 years
in adults (220, 223, 241, 242) and 1 to 2 years in children from
infected mothers (220, 223). The most likely mean latent period
was estimated to be 5 years in adults (220, 223). Unexpectedly,
most of the AIDS virus-positive blood donors identified in transfusion-associated
AIDS transmission did not have AIDS when they donated blood and
were reported to be in good health 6 years after the donation (220).
Likewise there is evidence that individuals shown to be antibody
positive since 1972 have not developed AIDS (228). Further 16 mothers
of babies with AIDS did not have AIDS at the time of delivery but
three of them developed AIDS years later (276). This indicates that
the latent period may be longer than 5 years or that AIDS is not
an obligatory consequence of infection.
In view of the claim that the virus directly kills T-cells and
requires 5 years to cause disease, we are faced with two bizarre
options: Either 5 year old T-cells die 5 years after infection or
the offspring of originally infected T-cells die in their 50th
generation, assuming a generation time of one month for an average
T-cell (176). It may be argued that the virus is biochemically inactive
during the first five years of infection and then activated by an
unknown cause. However, AIDS virus is biochemically inactive even
during the acute phase of the disease (Section C). Moreover it would
be difficult for the retrovirus to become acute five years after
it had induced chronic antiviral immunity.
Because of the 5 year latency between infection and AIDS, the virus
has been likened to the lentiviruses (277), a group of animal retroviruses
that is thought to cause debilitating diseases only after long latent
periods (13) (Part I, Section B). However recently an ovine lentivirus,
the visna or maedi virus of sheep, was shown to cause lymphoid interstitial
pneumonia in 2 to 4 weeks if expressed at a high titer (269). (The
same disease is believed to be caused by AIDS virus in humans (see
below)). Therefore lentiviruses are not models for retroviruses
that are only pathogenic after long latency (Part I, Section B).
Based on the 5-year latent period of the disease and on the assumption
that virus infection is sufficient to cause AIDS, one would expect
the number of AIDS cases to increase to 1 to 2 x 10 (6th
power) in the United States in the next 5 years. The virus has reportedly
reached its present endemic level of 1 to 2 x 10 (6th
power) in the United States (223, 224) since it was introduced there,
presumably, less than 10 years ago (27). Yet the spread of AIDS
from 1981 to 1986 has not followed the spread of virus with a latent
period of 5 years. Instead, recent statistics (see above) indicate
no further increases in the number of AIDS cases and a significant
decline in the number of AIDS fatalities in the United States (216,
244).
Clearly, the long lag between infection and AIDS and the large
number of virus-positive cases in which as yet no AIDS is observed,
even after long latent periods, lead to the conclusion that the
virus is not sufficient to induce AIDS and does not encode an AIDS-specific
function. Indeed, this conclusion is directly supported by genetic
evidence against a viral AIDS gene. Deletion analysis has proved
that all viral genes are essential for replication (28, 245), which
requires not more than 1 or 2 days, yet AIDS follows infection only
with an average lag of 5 years and even then only very rarely.
C. Levels of AIDS Virus Expression and Infiltration Appear Too
Low to Account for AIDS or Other Diseases
If AIDS viruses were pathogenic by killing susceptible lymphocytes,
one would expect AIDS to correlate with high levels of virus infiltration
and expression, because uninfected cells would not be killed by
viruses nor would unexpressed or latent viruses kill cells. As yet
no report on virus titers of AIDS patients has appeared, despite
the record interest in the epidemiology and nucleic acid structure
of this virus (13, 27, 223). In view of the consistent antiviral
immunity of AIDS patients and the difficulties in isolating virus
from them (213), the virus titers are probably low. Titers have
been said to range between only 0 and 10 (2nd power)
per ml blood (213, J.A. Levy, personal communication.)
Proviral DNA has been detected in only 15% (9 of 65) AIDS patients;
in the remaining 85% the concentration of provirus, if present,
was apparently too low for biochemical detection (246). Viral RNA
was detected in 50 to 80% of AIDS blood samples. However, among
the positive samples, RNA was found in only less than 1 of 10 (4th
power) to 10 (5th power) presumably susceptible lymphocytes
(247). The relatively high ratios of provirus-positive (10 (-2 power)
to 10 (-3 power)) to viral RNA-positive cells (10 (-4 power) to
10 (-5 power)) of AIDS patients indicate latent infections. Further
there is no evidence that the virus titer or the level of virus
infiltration increases during the acute phase of the disease. It
is probably for this reason that cells from AIDS patients must be
propagated several weeks in culture, apart from the host's immune
system, before either spontaneous (210-214) or chemically induced
(248) virus expression may occur. Further, the AIDS virus is completely
absent from the Kaposi sarcoma (27, 246), which is associated with
15% (216) to 30% (249) of AIDS cases and is one of the most characteristic
symptoms of the disease.
Similar extremely low levels of virus infiltration and expression
were also recorded in AIDS virus-associated brain disease (274).
Likewise, in interstitial lymphoid pneumonia less than 0.1% of lung
cells expressed viral RNA (275). Indeed there is evidence that even
latent virus may not be necessary for AIDS, since 85% of AIDS patients
lack proviral DNA (246) and since over 10% of AIDS patients have
been observed to lack antiviral immunity (214, 221, 222, 234). Further,
in a study from Germany 3 of 91 AIDS patients were found to be virus
free, based on repeated negative efforts to detect antibody or to
rescue virus. [H. Ruebsamen-Waigmann, personal communication.]
It is concluded then that the AIDS virus infects less than 1%,
and is expressed in less than 0.01%, of susceptible cells both in
carriers with or without AIDS. This raises the question of how the
virus could possibly be pathogenic and responsible for immunodeficiency
or other diseases. For instance even if the virus were to claim
its 10 (-4th power) or 10 (-5th power) share
of T-cells that express viral RNA every 24 to 48h, the known eclipse
period of retroviruses, it would hardly ever match or beat the natural
rate of T-cell regeneration (176).
All other viruses function as direct pathogens only if they are
biochemically active and expressed at high levels. For instance,
the titers that correlate with direct pathogenicity for avian retroviruses
are 10 (5th to 12th power) (31, 35, 250) and
they are 10 (4th to 7th power) for murine
retroviruses (12, 38, 40, 42, 251) (Section B). Hepatitis viruses
reach titers of 10 (12th to 13th power) when
they cause hepatitis (15), and latent infections are not pathogenic
(83). Further, the very low levels of AIDS virus expression in vivo
are difficult to reconcile with reports based on in vitro studies
with synthetic indicator genes that the AIDS virus encodes a potent
transcription-stimulating protein (28, 153, 245). Clearly such activators
are not at work in vivo.
The extremely low virus titers of symptomatic and asymptomatic
carriers also explain why infection by the virus in the United States
is essentially limited to contacts that involve transmission of
cells (244) rather than being transmitted as a cell-free, infectious
agent like pathogenic viruses. For instance, among 1750 health care
workers with exposure to AIDS, only 1 or 2 were found to be antibody
positive (252). Another study failed to find a single antibody-positive
person among 101 family contacts of 39 AIDS patients, all of whom
had lived in the same household with an AIDS patient for at least
3 months (253).
D. AIDS Viruses Not Directly Cytocidal
The AIDS viruses are reported to display in culture a fast cytocidal
effect on primary T-cells within 1 to 2 months after infection (13,
27, 254). The cytocidal effect was shown to involve cell fusion
(27, 238, 254). The effect is thought to reflect the mechanism of
how the virus generates AIDS after a latent period of 5 years (27,
254).
This is debatable on several grounds: (a) above all, the in vitro
assay cannot account for the large discrepancy between the short
latent period of cell death in vitro and the 5-year latent period
of the disease; (b) T-cell fusion is not observed in vivo in chronic,
asymptomatic virus carriers and not in prospective AIDS patients
during the long latent period of the disease (255), although virus
expression is not lower than during the acute phase of AIDS; ©
T-cell killing is also not observed in T-cell lines in vitro (27)
and not in primary lymphocytes under appropriate conditions (238).
Further primary lymphocytes infected by AIDS virus were shown to
double every 5 days in cell culture for three weeks; at the same
time the previously latent AIDS virus was activated to high levels
of expression (278); (d) virus strains that do not cause cytopathic
fusion in vitro have been isolated from 7 of 150 AIDS patients.
[H. Ruebsamen-Waigmann, personal communication.] This demonstrates
that the fusion-inducing function of the virus can be dissociated
from a putative AIDS function.
Thus T-cell killing by fusion is apparently a cell culture artifact
that depends on the virus strain and the cell used, as has been
shown for many other retroviruses including HTLV-I (Part I, Section
B), and not an obligatory feature of virus infection. As with other
retroviruses, fusion involves binding of viral envelope antigens
on the surface of infected cells with receptors of uninfected cells.
Accordingly, fusion is inhibited by AIDS virus-neutralizing antibody
(256). It apparently depends on high local virus titers that in
particular in the case of AIDS are not observed in vivo. This view
of the cell-killing effect also resolves the apparent contradiction
between the postulated cytocidal effects of AIDS viruses and the
obligatory requirement of all retroviruses for mitosis in order
to replicate (16, 25). Indeed AIDS viruses have been reported to
replicate without cytocidal effects not only in T-cells but also
in human monocytes and macrophages (257, 278), which share the same
virus-specific receptors (258), and in B-cell lines (259), in fibroblasts
(261) in human brain and the lung (213, 230, 232, 257, 261).
E. No Simian Models for AIDS
Since retroviruses have been isolated from monkeys in captivity
with immunodeficiencies and since experimental viremina can depress
immune functions in monkeys, such systems are considered to be animal
models of human AIDS. For example, 42 of 68 newborn monkeys died
with a broad spectrum of diseases that included runting and lymphadenopathy
4 to 6 weeks after inoculation with Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (91).
However, this virus has since been found in healthy macaques (262).
More recently a retrovirus termed simian AIDS or SAIDS was isolated
from monkeys with immunodeficiency (92, 262). Inoculation of three
juvenile rhesus monkeys by one isolate was reported to cause splenomegaly
and lymphoadenopathy within 2 to 5 weeks. One animal became moribund
and two others were alive with simian AIDS at the time of publication
(92). However, in another study only transient lymphadenopathy but
no lasting AIDS-like disease was observed in macaques inoculated
with this virus (263). Another simian virus that is serologically
related to AIDS virus, termed STLV-III, was isolated from immunodeficient
macaques and from one macaque with a lymphoma. Macaques inoculated
with blood or tissue samples of the viral lymphoma died 50 to 60
days later with various diseases (93). However, asymptomatic infections
by the same virus have since been identified in no less than 50%
of wild green monkeys that did not show any symptoms of a disease
(264).
Eight chimpanzees infected with human AIDS virus had not developed
symptoms of AIDS 1.5 years past inoculation (265). However, each
animal developed antiviral immunity about 1 month after infection,
followed by persistent latent infection, as in the human cases (265).
A follow-up of chimpanzees inoculated with sera from AIDS patients
in 1983 reports no evidence for AIDS in 1986 although the animals
had developed antibodies to the virus (243).
Several reasons suggest that these experimental infections of monkeys
are not suitable models for human AIDS. Above all, the human virus
is not pathogenic in animals. The diseases induced in monkeys by
experimental infections with simian viruses all occur fast compared
to the 5-year latency for AIDS. Moreover the simian viruses are
never associated with a disease in wild animals. Therefore these
diseases appear to be exactly analogous to the direct, early pathogenic
effects caused by other retroviruses in animals prior to antiviral
immunity (see Part I, Section B), and thus are probably models for
the early mononucleosis-like diseases which occur in humans infected
with AIDS virus prior to antiviral immunity (232, 234, 240) (Section
B). Indeed the persistent asymptomatic infections of wild monkeys
with simian retroviruses appear to be models for the many asymptomatic
infections of humans with AIDS virus or HTLV-I.
F. AIDS Virus as an Indicator of Low Risk for AIDS
The only support for the hypothesis that the AIDS virus causes
AIDS is that 90% of the AIDS patients have antibody to the virus.
Thus it would appear that the virus, at least as an immunogen, meets
the first of Koch's postulates for an etiological agent. This conclusion
assumes that all AIDS patients from whom virus cannot be isolated
(about 50%) (278) or in whom provirus cannot be demonstrated (85%)
and the antibody-negative cases (about 10%) and the virus-free cases
reported in one study (3%) (Section C) are false negatives. Indeed
the diagnosis of AIDS virus by antibody has recently been questioned
on the basis of false positives (234).
At this time the hypothesis that the virus causes AIDS faces several
direct challenges. (a) First it fails to explain why active antiviral
immunity, which includes neutralizing antibody (225-227) and which
effectively prevents virus spread and expression, would not prevent
the virus from causing a fatal disease. This is particularly paradoxical
since antiviral immunity or "vaccination" typically protects
against viral pathogenicity. It is also unexpected that AIDS patients
are capable of mounting an apparently highly effective, antiviral
immunity, although immunodeficiency is the hallmark of the disease.
(b) The hypothesis is also challenged by direct evidence that the
virus is not sufficient to cause AIDS. This includes (i) the low
percentage of symptomatic infections, (ii) the fact that some infected
groups are at a relatively high and others at no risk for AIDS,
(iii) the long latent period of the disease (Section B), and (iv)
the genetic evidence that the virus lacks a late AIDS function.
Since all viral genes are essential for virus replication (28, 245),
the virus should kill T-cells and hence cause AIDS at the time of
infection rather than 5 years later. (c ) The hypothesis also fails
to resolve the contradiction that the AIDS virus, like all retroviruses,
depends on mitosis for replication yet is postulated to be directly
cytocidal (Section D). (d) The hypothesis offers no convincing explanation
for the paradox that a fatal disease would be caused by a virus
that is latent and biochemically inactive and that infects less
than 1% and is expressed in less than 0.01% of susceptible lymphocytes
(Section D). In addition the hypothesis cannot explain why the virus
is not pathogenic in asymptomatic infections, since there is no
evidence that the virus is more active or further spread in carriers
with than in carriers without AIDS.
In view of this it seems likely that AIDS virus is just the most
common among the occupational viral infections of AIDS patients
and those at risk for AIDS, rather than the cause of AIDS. The disease
would then be caused by an as yet unidentified agent which may not
even be a virus, since cell-free contacts are not sufficient to
transmit the disease. Other viral infections of AIDS patients and
those at risk for AIDS include Epstein-Barr and cytomegalovirus
in 80 to 90% (222, 268), and herpes virus in 75 to 100%. [D. Purtilo,
personal communication.] In addition hepatitis B virus is found
in 90% of drug addicts positive for antibody to AIDS virus (267).
Among these different viruses, retroviruses are the most likely
to be detectable long after infection and hence are the most probable
passenger viruses of those exposed to multiple infectious agents.
This is because retroviruses are not cytocidal and are unsurpassed
in establishing persistent, non-pathogenic infections even in the
face of antiviral immunity. Therefore AIDS virus is a useful indicator
of contaminated sera that may cause AIDS (13, 27) and that may contain
other cell-free and cell-associated infectious agents. It is also
for these reasons that latent retroviruses are the most common nonpathogenic
passenger viruses of healthy animals and humans. For the same reasons,
they are also frequently passenger viruses of slow diseases other
than AIDS like the feline, bovine and human leukemias (see Part
I) or multiple sclerosis (268) in which latent or defective "leukemia
viruses" are occasionally found.
It is concluded that AIDS virus is not sufficient to cause AIDS
and that there is no evidence, besides its presence in a latent
form, that it is necessary for AIDS. However, the virus may be directly
responsible for the early, mononucleosis-like disease observed in
several infections prior to antiviral immunity (Section B). In a
person who belongs to the high risk group for AIDS, antibody against
the AIDS virus serves as an indicator of an annual risk for AIDS
that averages 0.3% and may reach 5%, but in a person that does not
belong to this group antibody to the virus signals no apparent risk
for AIDS. Since nearly all virus carriers have antiviral immunity
including neutralizing antibody (225-227), vaccination is not likely
to benefit virus carriers with or without AIDS. *
References
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