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
•Journal Article
Analysis of Replication Error (RER+) Phenotypes in Cervical Carcinoma
Amy A. Larson,Suzanne G. Kern,Robin L. Sommers,Jun Yokota,Webster K. Cavenee,Garret M. Hampton +5 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that defects in DNA repair-associated genes are rarely acquired and do not supersede allelic loss during cervical carcinogenesis, and the semiautomated multiplex approach has proven unequivocal in the detection and interpretation of MI.
The role of ATM and 53BP1 as predictive markers in cervical cancer.
Frank Roossink,Hylke W. Wieringa,Maartje G. Noordhuis,Klaske A. ten Hoor,Mirjam Kok,Lorian Slagter-Menkema,Harry Hollema,Geertruida H. de Bock,Elisabeth Pras,Elisabeth G.E. de Vries,Steven de Jong,Ate G.J. van der Zee,Ed Schuuring,G. Bea A. Wisman,Marcel A. T. M. van Vugt +14 more
TL;DR: Both in vitro and patient‐related findings indicate a protective role for ATM in response to (chemo)radiation in cervical cancer and point at ATM inhibition as a possible means to improve the efficacy of (Chemo) Radiation.
Three Prime Repair Exonuclease 1 (TREX1) expression correlates with cervical cancer cells growth in vitro and disease progression in vivo
Bruna Prati,Walason da Silva Abjaude,Lara Termini,Mirian Galliote Morale,Suellen Herbster,Adhemar Longatto-Filho,Adhemar Longatto-Filho,Rafaella Almeida Lima Nunes,Lizeth Carolina Córdoba Camacho,Silvia Helena Rabelo-Santos,Luiz Carlos Zeferino,Francisco Aguayo,Francisco Aguayo,Enrique Boccardo +13 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that TREX1 upregulation is important for cervical tumor cells growth and may contribute with tumor establishment and progression and the expression profile of 135 genes involved in DNA damage repair among primary human keratinocytes, HPV-positive and HPV-negative cell lines.
The human papillomavirus E7 oncoprotein can uncouple cellular differentiation and proliferation in human keratinocytes by abrogating p21Cip1-mediated inhibition of cdk2
TL;DR: It is proposed that this capacity of the HPV E7 oncoprotein to overcome p21(Cip1)-mediated inhibition of cdk2 activity during keratinocyte differentiation contributes to the ability of E7 to allow for cellular DNA synthesis in differentiated keratinocytes.
The Epidemiology and Risk Factors of Head and Neck Cancer: a Focus on Human Papillomavirus
TL;DR: Not all HPV-positive HNSCC express the viral oncogenes (E6 and E7), which suggests that HPV may function as a carcinogen in a smaller proportion of H NSCC.
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