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Hepatitis B virus X protein interferes with cellular DNA repair.

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TLDR
Results are consistent with a model in which HBx acts as a cofactor in hepatocarcinogenesis by preventing the cell from efficiently repairing damaged DNA, thus leading to an accumulation of DNA mutations and, eventually, cancer.
Abstract
The hepatitis B virus X protein (HBx) is a broadly acting transactivator implicated in the development of liver cancer. Recently, HBx has been reported to interact with several different cellular proteins, including our report of its binding to XAP-1, the human homolog of the simian repair protein UVDDB. In the present study, several HBx mutants were used to localize the minimal domain of HBx required for binding to XAP-1/UVDDB to amino acids 55 to 101. The normal function of XAP-1/UVDDB is thought to involve binding to damaged DNA, the first step in nucleotide excision repair (NER); therefore, we hypothesized that this interaction may affect the cell’s capacity to correct lesions in the genome. When tested in two independent assays that measure NER (unscheduled DNA synthesis and host cell reactivation), the expression of HBx significantly inhibited the ability of cells to repair damaged DNA. Under the assay conditions, HBx was expressed at a level similar to that previously observed during natural viral infection and was able to transactivate several target reporter genes. These results are consistent with a model in which HBx acts as a cofactor in hepatocarcinogenesis by preventing the cell from efficiently repairing damaged DNA, thus leading to an accumulation of DNA mutations and, eventually, cancer. An adverse effect on cellular DNA repair processes suggests a new mechanism by which a tumor-associated virus might contribute to carcinogenesis.

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The Enigmatic X Gene of Hepatitis B Virus

TL;DR: Studies of HBx activities during HBV replication should help clarify the many properties that have been ascribed to HBx expression, including those that are required for viral replication and those that may influence cellular transformation.
References
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TL;DR: General methods bacterial strains and cloning vectors enzymes that modify DNA and RNA in vitro amplification of DNA using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and the thermostable Taq DNA polymerase, introduction DNA restriction fragment analysis and preparation.
Journal Article

Transformation of mammalian cells to antibiotic resistance with a bacterial gene under control of the SV40 early region promoter.

TL;DR: A bacterial gene conferring resistance to neomycin-kanamycin antibiotics has been inserted into SV40 hybrid plasmid vectors and introduced into cultured mammalian cells by DNA transfusion and it is shown that cell transformation to G418 resistance is an efficient means for cotransformation of nonselected genes.
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Controlled synthesis of HBsAg in a differentiated human liver carcinoma-derived cell line

TL;DR: This work reports the derivation and characterisation of two additional cell lines from primary liver carcinomas which retain the capacity to synthesise many human plasma proteins, including both albumin and α-fetoprotein (AFP), and presents evidence that HBsAg synthesis and secretion in this cell line are correlated with the growth state of the culture.
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DNA excision repair

TL;DR: Transcribed strands are specifically targeted for excision repair by a transcription-repair coupling factor both in E. coli and in humans, which is an important defense mechanism against the two major carcinogens, sunlight and cigarette smoke.
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Production of hepatitis B virus particles in Hep G2 cells transfected with cloned hepatitis B virus DNA.

TL;DR: The Hep G2 cell line can support the assembly and secretion not only of several of the replicative intermediates of HBV DNA but also of Dane-like particles, and this in vitro system can now be used to study the life cycle ofHBV and the reaction of immunocompetent cells with cells carrying HBV.
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