Scientists discover traitor human DNA helps viruses cause cancer
UCL scientists have discovered that stretches of human DNA act as a traitor to the body's defences by helping viruses infect people and trigger cancer-causing diseases. The research, which was undertaken at the UCL Cancer Institute and funded by Cancer Research UK, and published in Nature Cell Biology today, revealed that viruses can exploit the body's DNA ' dampening its antiviral immune response and allowing infection to take hold more easily. The UCL Cancer Institute scientists showed that this happened with the Kaposi sarcoma herpesvirus which causes the cancer Kaposi Sarcoma, and also with the herpes simplex virus which causes cold sores. Our immune system uses multiple ways to prevent or clear infection. In parallel, viruses have also evolved highly sophisticated counter-measures to escape from the human immune defence. The team has discovered that viruses exploit tiny molecules derived from human DNA called microRNAs, to make cells more susceptible to viral infection. MicroRNAs are mostly found in parts of the human genome which do not generate proteins ? initially thought to be 'junk DNA'.

