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Projeto de investigação
PATHOGENESIS OF THE ONCOLOGICAL PROCESS ASSOCIATED WITH BOVINE ENZOOTIC HEMATURIA
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Bovine papillomavirus type 2 infection in the pathogenesis of the Bovine Enzootic Hematuria : related oncological process
Publication . Cota, João de Bettencourt Barcelos; Peleteiro, Maria da Conceição da Cunha e Vasconcelos; Duarte, Ana Isabel Simões Pereira
Bovine Enzootic Hematuria (BEH) is a disease that affects cattle and water buffalos in specific regions of the globe, mainly associated with the chronic ingestion of bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum) whose major characteristic is the development of urinary bladder tumors. One of the regions where this disease is endemic is the Azores Archipelago, Portugal. In these Atlantic islands bracken fern finds the appropriate conditions for continuous growth in the farmlands, and thus this toxic plant is frequently available for cattle consumption. The involvement of the Bovine papillomavirus type 2 (BPV2) in the genesis of this disease has been pointed out to be paramount, but some aspects involving the association between bracken fern and Papillomavirus remain unclear. This work aimed to study the role of this infectious agent in the oncological process observed in BEH, and is divided into seven chapters.
In the first chapter, the major features, the implications and the etiology of this disease, with a special focus on ptaquiloside and BPV2, are reviewed. Additionally, urinary bladder tumors in man, and the genetic alterations associated to the disease, are briefly revised.
The second chapter contains the specific objectives that were sought with the present work, and that resulted in the four experimental chapters that follow.
In the third chapter, a detailed histopathological characterization of the urinary bladder lesions found in BEH-affected cattle from the Azores Archipelago which were used in the experimental work, is presented. Furthermore, an immunohistochemical study of the expression of cytokeratins in the epithelial neoplasms is also presented. Our results support previous findings that most urinary bladder BEH-associated lesions are neoplastic, and have epithelial origin. The decrease in the number of neoplastic cells expressing cytokeratin 7 in urinary bladder urothelial tumors was associated with increasing pathological grade and stage, whereas the decrease in the expression of cytokeratin 20 was only associated with increasing stage.
The fourth chapter is dedicated to the prevalence and transcriptional activity of BPV2 in the urinary bladder lesions of BEH-affected cattle from the Azores Archipelago. The results obtained show that, though BPV2 is widely distributed within the bovine
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population of the Azores, the viral loads determined are very low, suggesting that BPV2 could be inactive, since no transcriptional activity was detected.
In the fifth chapter a quantitative and qualitative gene expression study is presented, comparing the expression levels of cell cycle controlling genes and of a growth factor receptor gene in BPV2 positive and negative epithelial and endothelial bovine urinary bladder tumors of BEH-affected cattle. The expression of TP53, MDM2 and CCND1 genes was above normal, but no differences between BPV2 positive and negative epithelial and endothelial tumors were found. The expression of the EGFR gene was lower both in BPV2 positive epithelial and endothelial tumors when compared with BPV2 negative ones. This possible association between BPV2 infection and lower EGFR should be further investigated in future studies.
The sixth chapter presents the preliminary in vitro study through which the effects of BPV2’s oncoproteins in a bovine cell line were assessed. Neoplastic transformation was not achieved, but changes in the cellular growth rate and gene expression patterns were observed, suggesting viral oncoprotein activities yet unknown.
The main conclusions of this work are pointed out and discussed in the seventh chapter. The oncological process found BEH and its association with BPV2 are still a matter for further research. The results presented within this thesis provide a better insight into this subject but also open and support new questions worth investigating in future research.
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Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
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SFRH/BD/79952/2011
