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Cancer-Causing Virus Strikes Genetically Vulnerable Horses

By Merry R. Buckley

Sarcoid skin tumors are the most common form of cancer in horses, but little is known about why the papillomavirus behind them strikes some horses and not others. A new study by an international research group led by scientists at the Baker Institute for Animal Health at Cornell’s College of Veterinary Medicine shows genetic differences in immune function between horses partly accounts for these differences. The study, published in the International Journal of Cancer, mirrors findings in humans, as some people have a genetic susceptibility to human papillomavirus, which can cause cervical and other cancers.

A 3 cm sarcoid tumor on a horse’s ear. Sarcoids often develop as small bumps under the skin or scaly lesions like the one in the photo. Depending on their location on the horse’s body, tumors like these can often be removed by a veterinarian. However, in certain horses sarcoids tend to regrow after surgery, sometimes to much larger tumors that are impossible to cure.

“Many therapies have been proposed as the ‘best’ treatment for sarcoids,” says Dr. Doug Antczak, the Dorothy Havemeyer McConville Professor of Equine Medicine, who led 
 
the study. In some horses, tumors develop as small bumps under the skin or as scaly lesions that easily can be removed by a veterinarian, but in other horses the 
 
problem becomes much more serious. Surgery, cryotherapy (freezing the tissue), laser treatment, injecting the tumors with drugs to kill the cells, radiation treatment 
 
and immunotherapy have all been shown to cure these recalcitrant tumors, “but some tumors tend to recur no matter what treatment is used, and there is no universal 
 
consensus on a uniformly successful therapy,” says Antczak.
 
Antczak says it’s been thought for years that bovine papillomavirus (BPV) is the most likely culprit behind sarcoid tumors. Recent work from Europe suggests variants 
 
of the BPV have become adapted to horses and are probably the cause of most sarcoids.
 
With a grant from the Morris Animal Foundation, Antczak, his collaborators Samantha Brooks and Ann Staiger from the University of Florida, and the rest of the team 
 
applied a genomewide association study to compare the genetic makeup of horses with and without sarcoid tumors at more than 50,000 sites in the equine genome. They 
 
studied 82 sarcoid-bearing horses from the U.S. and United Kingdom and 272 carefully matched controls that did not have sarcoids. They found regions on chromosomes 20 
 
and 22 that tended to be different in horses diagnosed with sarcoids, evidence that a horse’s genes determine, in part, how susceptible it is to sarcoids.
 
“This is an example of more complicated genetics – multigene susceptibility,” says Antczak. “More than one genetic region is associated with susceptibility to 
 
sarcoids, and they don’t completely determine whether or not a horse will develop the disease once it’s exposed to BPV.”
 
This genetic link implicates the immune system in sarcoid susceptibility. The region of chromosome 20 associated with sarcoid development is within a portion of the 
 
genome responsible for immune function called the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) class II region. The MHC type associated with sarcoid susceptibility is very 
 
rare among Standardbred horses, a fact that may explain why sarcoid is diagnosed so rarely in this breed.
 
This complex mix of virus, host genes and tumor development may have relevance to a related human condition. Tumors caused by human papillomaviruses account for more 
 
than 5 percent of cancer cases worldwide. In women with cervical cancer, an association with the MHC class II region has also been shown.
 
“That should make a light bulb go off,” Antczak says. “It suggests there’s a common mechanism in both species for susceptibility to tumor progression that may involve 
 
subversion of the host immune response. By studying this phenomenon in horses you can learn about human cancer and vice versa.”
 

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