“…In fact, Woodchuck Hepatitis Virus, the Hepadnavirus infecting woodchucks, induces liver cancer by recurrent targeting of myc oncogenes (c-myc, N-myc and N-myc2) (Buendia, 1992), and rare cases of HBV integration into key cellular genes have been reported in human liver tumors (retinoic acid receptor beta (Dejean et al, 1986) and Cyclin A (Wang et al, 1990)) and cell lines (mevalonate kinase (Graef et al, 1994)). Moreover, earlier studies have demonstrated that HBV-DNArelated RAR and Cyclin A insertional mutagenesis has transforming activity in vitro and in vivo (Garcia et al, 1993;Berasain et al, 1998). However, recurrent HBV integration sites targeting cellular genes have never been identified in the past (Matsubara and Tokino, 1990), suggesting that insertional mutagenesis does not play a significant role in liver carcinogenesis.…”