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1.
Integration of human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) DNA into a host chromosome has been hypothesized to result in altered expression of two viral transforming genes, E6 and E7, in cervical cancers. In order to investigate the role that changes in viral genomic state and gene expression play in cervical carcinogenesis, we have derived clonal populations of human cervical epithelial cells which harbor multiple copies of either extrachromosomal or integrated viral DNA. The clonal populations harboring extrachromosomal HPV-16 DNA stably maintained approximately 1,000 viral copies for at least 15 passages (approximately 100 cell doublings), which contrasted with the unstable HPV-16 replicons in the parental counterpart. In the clonal populations harboring integrated viral DNA, 3 to 60 copies of HPV-16 DNA were found integrated in either of two forms: type 1, in which all the copies of HPV-16 DNA were disrupted in the E2 open reading frame upon integration, and type 2, in which intact viral copies were flanked by disrupted viral copies and cellular sequences. Despite the lower HPV-16 DNA copy number, the clonal populations with integrated viral DNA had levels of E7 protein that were in most cases higher than those found in the clonal populations harboring extrachromosomal viral DNA. Irrespective of viral genomic state, the clonal populations were capable of undergoing terminal differentiation and unable to form colonies in soft agar, which is indicative of the nontumorigenic nature of these cells. Importantly, a cell population with integrated viral DNA was found to outgrow another with extrachromosomal DNA when these cells were cocultured over a period of time. Thus, integration of human papillomaviral DNA correlates with increased viral gene expression and cellular growth advantage. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that integration provides a selective advantage to cervical epithelial precursors of cervical carcinoma.  相似文献   

2.
Transient replication of human papillomavirus DNAs.   总被引:16,自引:9,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Information on papillomavirus DNA replication has primarily derived from studies with bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV-1). Our knowledge of DNA replication of the human papillomaviruses (HPVs) is quite limited, in part because of the lack of a cell culture system capable of supporting the stable replication of HPV DNA. This study demonstrates that the full-length genomic DNAs of HPV types 11 and 18 (HPV-11 and HPV-18), but not HPV-16, are able to replicate transiently after transfection into several different human squamous cell carcinoma cell lines. This system was used to identify the viral cis and trans elements required for DNA replication. The viral origins of replication were localized to a region of the viral long control region. Like BPV-1, E1 and E2 were the only viral factors required in trans for the replication of plasmids containing the origin. Cotransfection of a plasmid expressing the E1 open reading frame (ORF) from HPV-11 with a plasmid that expresses the E2 ORF from HPV-6, HPV-11, HPV-16, or HPV-18 supported the replication of plasmid DNAs containing the origin regions of HPV-11, HPV-16, or HPV-18, indicating that there are functions shared among the corresponding E1 and E2 proteins and origins of these viruses. Although HPV-16 genomic DNA did not replicate by itself under experimental conditions that supported the replication of HPV-11 and HPV-18 genomic DNAs, expression of the HPV-16 early region functions from a strong heterologous promoter supported the replication of a cotransfected plasmid containing the HPV-16 origin of replication. This finding suggests that the inability of the HPV-16 genomic DNA to replicate transiently in the cell lines tested was most likely due to insufficient expression of the viral E1 and/or E2 genes required for DNA replication.  相似文献   

3.
Punch biopsy specimens of the cervix were examined both histologically and for the presence of human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA sequences. The presence of HPV DNA sequences was sought with the Southern blot technique using radioactively labelled HPV-6, 11, 16, and 18 DNA probes, both together and separately. Twenty six biopsy specimens were examined. Histological examination showed cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or 3 in 16 specimens, viral changes (koilocytosis) in four, and inflammation or a normal appearance in three. Eleven specimens were negative for HPV DNA sequences, 10 contained HPV-16 DNA, four contained HPV-18 DNA, and one contained both HPV-18 and HPV-11 DNA. Episomal HPV-16 DNA was detected in one case of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 3 and in five cases of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2/3 with koilocytosis; and episomal HPV-18 DNA was found in two specimens classed as cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2/3, one of which also contained HPV-11 DNA, and in one specimen that showed viral changes alone. Integrated HPV DNA was found in six specimens (four with HPV-16 DNA and two with HPV-18 DNA), including two cases of chronically inflamed cervix with no histological evidence of viral infection or cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. Detection of viral DNA in early lesions may identify patients at risk of malignant progression. This is the first report of HPV-18 DNA in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in Scotland.  相似文献   

4.
We have isolated four clones of integrated human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) DNA from four different primary cervical cancer specimens. All clones were found to be monomeric or dimeric forms of HPV-16 DNA with cellular flanking sequences at both ends. Analysis of the viral sequences in these clones showed that E6/E7 open reading frames and the long control region were conserved and that no region specific for the integration was detected. Analysis of the cellular flanking sequences revealed no significant homology with any known human DNA sequences, except Alu sequences, and no homology among the clones, indicating no cellular sequence specific for the integration. By probing with single-copy cellular flanking sequences from the clones, it was demonstrated that the integrated HPV-16 DNAs, with different sizes in the same specimens, shared the same cellular flanking sequences at the ends. Furthermore, it was shown that the viral sequences together with cellular flanking sequences were amplified. The possible process of viral integration into cell chromosomes in cervical cancer is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Many human papillomavirus (HPV)-positive high-grade lesions and cancers of the uterine cervix harbor integrated HPV genomes expressing the E6 and E7 oncogenes from chimeric virus-cell mRNAs, but less is known about HPV integration in head and neck cancer (HNC). Here we compared viral DNA status and E6-E7 mRNA sequences in HPV-16-positive HNC tumors to those in independent human keratinocyte cell clones derived from primary tonsillar or foreskin epithelia immortalized with HPV-16 genomes. Three of nine HNC tumors and epithelial clones containing unintegrated HPV-16 genomes expressed mRNAs spliced from HPV-16 SD880 to SA3358 and terminating at the viral early gene p(A) signal. In contrast, most integrated HPV genomes in six HNCs and a set of 31 keratinocyte clones expressed HPV-16 major early promoter (MEP)-initiated mRNAs spliced from viral SD880 directly to diverse cellular sequences, with a minority spliced to SA3358 followed by a cellular DNA junction. Sequence analysis of chimeric virus-cell mRNAs from HNC tumors and keratinocyte clones identified viral integration sites in a variety of chromosomes, with some located in or near growth control genes, including the c-myc protooncogene and the gene encoding FAP-1 phosphatase. Taken together, these findings support the hypothesis that HPV integration in cancers is a stochastic process resulting in clonal selection of aggressively expanding cells with altered gene expression of integrated HPV genomes and potential perturbations of cellular genes at or near viral integration sites. Furthermore, our results demonstrate that this selection also takes place and can be studied in primary human keratinocytes in culture.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Summary Genomic insertion of human papillomavirus (HPV) sequences is associated with the genesis of cervical carcinoma, and HPV-induced incipient cellular alterations may also present a requisite for the establishment of cell lines such as HeLa. Considering the theoretical importance of specific viral integration sites, we attempted to detect in HeLa cells the chromosomal location of DNA sequences homologous to HPV-16 and HPV-18 sequences by a nonisotopic high resolution in situ hybridization technique. Chromosome identification following in situ hybridization was possible by counterstaining of the same preparation with Chromomycin A3, Distamycin A, and DAPI. Using this approach, we have assigned HPV-18 integration in HeLa cells to band 8q24 (a site including the locus of the myc-protooncogene), to an abnormal chromosome 22, and to a not yet identified marker chromosome possibly neighboring other oncogenic or activating sites. The sensitive detection technique described in this study presents a new approach involving in situ chromosome hybridization with biotinylated DNA probes in combination with reflection contrast microscopy and subsequent fluorescent R-and C-banding. The method allowed the assignment of a 7-kb HPV-18 DNA probe to human chromosomal sites important in growth regulation and cancerogenesis. It should prove useful in a number of similar studies using other viral and oncogenic DNA probes.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Human cervical carcinoma cell lines that harbor human papillomavirus (HPV) have been reported to retain selectively and express HPV sequences which could encode viral E6 and E7 proteins. The potential importance of HPV E6 to tumors is suggested further by the observation that bovine papillomavirus (BPV) E6 can induce morphologic transformation of mouse cells in vitro. To identify HPV E6 protein, a polypeptide encoded by HPV-16 E6 was produced in a bacterial expression vector and used to raise antisera. The antisera specifically immunoprecipitated the predicted 18-kd protein in two human carcinoma cell lines known to express HPV-16 RNA and in mouse cells morphologically transformed by HPV-16 DNA. The 18-kd E6 protein was distinct from a previously identified HPV-16 E7 protein. The HPV-16 E6 antibodies were found to be type specific in that they did not recognize E6 protein in cells containing HPV-18 sequences and reacted weakly, if at all, to BPV E6 protein. The results demonstrate that human tumors containing HPV-16 DNA can express an E6 protein product. They are consistent with the hypothesis that E6 may contribute to the transformed phenotype in human cervical cancers that express this protein.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
A general theme that has emerged from studies of DNA tumor viruses is that otherwise unrelated oncoproteins encoded by these viruses often target the same important cellular factors. Major oncogenic determinants for human adenovirus type 9 (Ad9) and high-risk human papillomaviruses (HPV) are the E4-ORF1 and E6 oncoproteins, respectively, and although otherwise unrelated, both of these viral proteins possess a functional PDZ domain-binding motif that is essential for their transforming activity and for binding to the PDZ domain-containing and putative tumor suppressor protein DLG. We report here that the PDZ domain-binding motifs of Ad9 E4-ORF1 and high-risk HPV-18 E6 also mediate binding to the widely expressed cellular factor MUPP1, a large multi-PDZ domain protein predicted to function as an adapter in signal transduction. With regard to the consequences of these interactions in cells, we showed that Ad9 E4-ORF1 aberrantly sequesters MUPP1 within the cytoplasm of cells whereas HPV-18 E6 targets this cellular protein for degradation. These effects were specific because mutant viral proteins unable to bind MUPP1 lack these activities. From these results, we propose that the multi-PDZ domain protein MUPP1 is involved in negatively regulating cellular proliferation and that the transforming activities of two different viral oncoproteins depend, in part, on their ability to inactivate this cellular factor.  相似文献   

13.
TGF-beta regulation of epithelial cell proliferation.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
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14.
Previous studies have shown that DNA can be transferred from dying engineered cells to neighboring cells through the phagocytosis of apoptotic bodies, which leads to cellular transformation. Here, we provide evidence of an uptake of apoptotic-derived cervical cancer cells by human mesenchymal cells. Interestingly, HeLa (HPV 18+) or Ca Ski (HPV16+) cells, harboring integrated high-risk HPV DNA but not C-33 A cells (HPV-), were able to transform the recipient cells. Human primary fibroblasts engulfed the apoptotic bodies effectively within 30 minutes after co-cultivation. This mechanism is active and involves the actin cytoskeleton. In situ hybridization of transformed fibroblasts revealed the presence of HPV DNA in the nucleus of a subset of phagocytosing cells. These cells expressed the HPV16/18 E6 gene, which contributes to the disruption of the p53/p21 pathway, and the cells exhibited a tumorigenic phenotype, including an increased proliferation rate, polyploidy and anchorage independence growth. Such horizontal transfer of viral oncogenes to surrounding cells that lack receptors for HPV could facilitate the persistence of the virus, the main risk factor for cervical cancer development. This process might contribute to HPV-associated disease progression in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
The Cytobrush was compared with the cotton swab for collecting samples used to detect human papillomavirus (HPV) types 16 and 18 DNA by filter in situ hybridization. The study design entailed collecting two endocervical and one vaginal fornix sample from each of 200 women admitted to a colposcopy clinic. No difference was found in the HPV positivity rates in samples obtained with the two collection instruments. There was good agreement (91.5%) in the detection of viral DNA between the first and second endocervical samples; however, 15% of the patients with positive samples had detectable DNA in their second sample only. Significantly fewer samples from the fornix contained detectable HPV-16 or HPV-18 DNA than did endocervical samples.  相似文献   

16.
《Cancer epidemiology》2014,38(4):369-375
Background: The importance of human papillomavirus (HPV) viral load in the pathogenesis of cervical cancer among HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected women has not yet been established. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, HPV-16 viral loads were measured using previously-collected and frozen cervical swab samples from 498 HPV-16 positive Senegalese women (368 HIV-seronegative, 126 HIV-1 and/or HIV-2 seropositive). The real-time polymerase chain reaction assay was used to quantify HPV-16 E7 copy number normalized by human cellular DNA (β-actin), and viral loads were log10 transformed. Associations between HPV-16 viral load, degree of cervical abnormality, and HIV status were assessed using multinomial and linear regression methods. Results: Compared to women with normal cytology, the likelihood of CIN1 (ORa: 1.21, 95% CI 0.93–1.57), CIN2-3 (ORa: 2.38, 95% CI 1.72–3.29) and cancer (ORa: 2.12, 95% CI 1.52–2.96) was found to increase for each 1-unit log10 increase in HPV-16 viral load. Compared to HIV-negative women, HIV-positive women had higher average HPV-16 viral load values (βa: 0.39, 95% CI 0.03–0.75), even after accounting for degree of cervical abnormality. Conclusion: In our study of women including those with cancer, HPV-16 viral load was associated with a higher likelihood of cervical abnormalities. However, substantial overlaps across categories of disease severity existed. Higher viral load among HIV-infected individuals may indicate that HIV infection influences HPV viral replication factors.  相似文献   

17.
Papillomaviral DNA replicates as extrachromosomal plasmids in squamous epithelium. Viral DNA must segregate equitably into daughter cells to persist in dividing basal/parabasal cells. We have previously reported that the viral origin binding protein E2 of human papillomavirus types 11 (HPV-11), 16, and 18 colocalized with the mitotic spindles. In this study, we show the localization of the HPV-11 E2 protein to be dynamic. It colocalized with the mitotic spindles during prophase and metaphase. At anaphase, it began to migrate to the central spindle microtubules, where it remained through telophase and cytokinesis. It was additionally observed in the midbody at cytokinesis. A peptide spanning residues 285 to 308 in the carboxyl-terminal domain of HPV-11 E2 (E2C) is necessary and sufficient to confer localization on the mitotic spindles. This region is conserved in HPV-11, -16, and -18 and bovine papillomavirus type 4 (BPV-4) E2 and is also required for the respective E2C to colocalize with the mitotic spindles. The E2 protein of bovine papillomavirus type 1 is tethered to the mitotic chromosomes via the cellular protein Brd4. However, the HPV-11 E2 protein did not associate with Brd4 during mitosis. Lastly, a chimeric BPV-1 E2C containing the spindle localization domain from HPV-11 E2C gained the ability to localize to the mitotic spindles, whereas the reciprocal chimera lost the ability. We conclude that this region of HPV E2C is critical for localization with the mitotic apparatus, enabling the HPV DNA to sustain persistent infections.  相似文献   

18.
DNA sequences of specific human papillomavirus (HPV) types are found integrated in the cell genome in most invasive genital carcinomas. We have determined the chromosomal localization of integrated HPV type 16 (HPV-16) or HPV-18 genomes in genital cancers by in situ hybridization experiments. In three cancers, HPV sequences were localized in chromosome band 8q24.1, in which the c-myc gene is mapped, and in one cancer HPV sequences were localized in chromosome band 2p24, which contains the N-myc gene. In three of the four cases, the proto-oncogene located near integrated viral sequences was found to be structurally altered and/or overexpressed. These data indicate that HPV genomes are preferentially integrated near myc genes in invasive genital cancers and support the hypothesis that integration plays a part in tumor progression via an activation of cellular oncogenes.  相似文献   

19.
The selective retention and expression of the E6-E7 region of human papillomavirus (HPV) types 16 and 18 in cervical carcinomas suggests that these viral sequences play a role in the development of genital neoplasia. Each of three possible gene products, E6, E6*, and E7, from this region of HPV-18 were examined for transforming properties in several types of rodent cells. We have found that in immortalized fibroblasts, both E6 and E7 (but not E6*) are capable of inducing anchorage-independent growth. In rat embryo cells, the HPV-18 E7 open reading frame was an effective immortalizing agent and complemented an activated ras oncogene for transformation. In both immortalized and primary cells, transformation was observed when the HPV-18 sequences were expressed from either the HPV-18 promoter or a heterologous promoter. The E6-E7 region is not, however, the sole transforming domain of HPV-18, since another portion of the early region, possibly E5, also exhibited transforming capability in immortalized fibroblasts. The development of human cervical carcinomas may therefore involve a series of steps involving multiple viral and cellular gene products.  相似文献   

20.
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