Human papillomavirus 16 E6 expression disrupts the p53-mediated cellular response to DNA damage
Theodore D. Kessis,Robert J. Slebos,William G. Nelson,Michael B. Kastan,Beverly Plunkett,Sung M. Han,Attila T. Lorincz,Lora Hedrick,Kathleen R. Cho +8 more
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that oncogenic E6 can disrupt an important cellular response to DNA damage mediated by p53 and may contribute to the subsequent accumulation of genetic changes associated with cervical tumorigenesis.
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Abstract: Infection with certain types of human papillomaviruses (HPV) is highly associated with carcinomas of the human uterine cervix. However, HPV infection alone does not appear to be sufficient for the process of malignant transformation, suggesting the requirement of additional cellular events. After DNA damage, normal mammalian cells exhibit G1 cell-cycle arrest and inhibition of replicative DNA synthesis. This mechanism, which requires wild-type p53, presumably allows cells to undertake DNA repair and avoid the fixation of mutations. We directly tested whether the normal response of cervical epithelial cells to DNA damage may be undermined by interactions between the E6 protein expressed by oncogenic HPV types and wild-type p53. We treated primary keratinocytes with the DNA-damaging agent actinomycin D and demonstrated inhibition of replicative DNA synthesis and a significant increase in p53 protein levels. In contrast, inhibition of DNA synthesis and increases in p53 protein did not occur after actinomycin D treatment of keratinocytes immortalized with HPV16 E6/E7 or in cervical carcinoma cell lines containing HPV16, HPV18, or mutant p53 alone. To test the effects of E6 alone on the cellular response to DNA damage, HPV16 E6 was expressed in the carcinoma cell line RKO, resulting in undetectable baseline levels of p53 protein and loss of the G1 arrest that normally occurs in these cells after DNA damage. These findings demonstrate that oncogenic E6 can disrupt an important cellular response to DNA damage mediated by p53 and may contribute to the subsequent accumulation of genetic changes associated with cervical tumorigenesis.
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Citations
Oncolytic adenovirus expressing a p53 variant resistant to degradation by HPV E6 protein exhibits potent and selective replication in cervical cancer.
Daniëlle A.M. Heideman,Renske D.M. Steenbergen,Jaco van der Torre,Martin Scheffner,Ramon Alemany,Winald R. Gerritsen,Chris J.L.M. Meijer,Peter J.F. Snijders,Victor W. van Beusechem +8 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that AdCB016-mp53(268N) is a promising new agent for treatment of HPV-associated human cancers.
HPV is an essential driver in recurrence of cervical cancer
Sara Bønløkke,Magnus Stougaard,Jan Blaakær,Jesper Bertelsen,Karoline Andersen,Katrine Fuglsang,Torben Steiniche +6 more
TL;DR: High-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) is a crucial driver in cervical cancer recurrence, detected in distant metastases, indicating its persistent involvement in the disease's progression and metastasis.
The high risk human papillomaviruses and oral cancer: evidence for and against a causal relationship.
PB Sugerman,EJ Shillitoe +1 more
TL;DR: Infection of oral keratinocytes with high risk HPV may be involved in the pathogenesis of some oral SCCs although the evidence implicating HPV in oral carcinogenesis is, at present, mainly circumstantial.
Protein Translation Dysregulation and Immune Cell Evasion Define Metastatic Clones in HPV-related Cancer of the Oropharynx
Venessa T Chin,Walter Muskovic,Rachael A. McCloy,Drew R Neavin,José Alquicira-Hernandez,Himanshi Arora,Anne Senabouth,Patricia Keith,Ellie Spenceley,Angela Murphy,Dominik Kaczorowski,Peter Floros,Peter Earls,B. Leavers,Julia Crawford,Richard Gallagher,Joseph E. Powell +16 more
TL;DR: This work identifies virally induced cancer clones based on mutational similarity scores between cells in the primary and lymph node metastasis and demonstrates that the upregulation of cap-independent translational drives cell proliferation in metastatic clones through the expression of translation initiation factors.
Nitrative and oxidative DNA damage in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia associated with human papilloma virus infection
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