A 72-year old Englishman was admitted with rapid deterioration in cognitive function, gait disturbance, and cerebellar signs and lapsed into a coma within one week of admission to the hospital. He had long-standing hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia, for which he was on regular medication. He had suffered recurrent episodes of stroke between September 1997 and May 2001. Three months prior to presentation, he became forgetful and generally mentally slow, affecting his daily activities. He was also noted to have fluctuations in his conscious level, associated with myoclonic jerks of the limbs. The brain MRI revealed hyperintense lesions on T2- weighted images in the periventricular region, left corona radiata, centrum semiovale, pons, midbrain and right thalamus. The electroencephalograph revealed periodic sharp wave complexes, strongly suggestive of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. However, we were not able to get a tissue diagnosis or send the cerebrospinal fluid for protein 14-3-3.
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a ubiquitous tumor-causing virus which infects more than 90% of the world population asymptomatically. Recent studies suggest that LMP-1, -2A and -2B cooperate in the tumorigenesis of EBV-associated epithelial cancers such as nasopharygeal carcinoma, oral and gastric cancer. In this study, LMPs were expressed in the HEK293T cell line to reveal their oncogenic mechanism via investigation on their involvement in the regulation of the cell cycle and genes that are involved. LMPs were expressed in HEK293T in single and co-expression manner. The transcription of cell cycle arrest genes were examined via real-time PCR. Cell cycle progression was examined via flow cytometry. 14-3-3σ and Reprimo were upregulated in all LMP-1 expressing cells. Moreover, cell cycle arrest at G(2)/M progression was detected in all LMP-1 expressing cells. Therefore, we conclude that LMP-1 may induce cell cycle arrest at G(2)/M progression via upregulation of 14-3-3σ and Reprimo.