Some Novel Insights on HPV16 Related Cervical Cancer Pathogenesis Based on Analyses of LCR Methylation, Viral Load, E7 and E2/E4 Expressions
Open Access
- 6 September 2012
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 7 (9) , e44678
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044678
Abstract
This study was undertaken to decipher the interdependent roles of (i) methylation within E2 binding site I and II (E2BS-I/II) and replication origin (nt 7862) in the long control region (LCR), (ii) expression of viral oncogene E7, (iii) expression of the transcript (E7-E1∧E4) that encodes E2 repressor protein and (iv) viral load, in human papillomavirus 16 (HPV16) related cervical cancer (CaCx) pathogenesis. The results revealed over-representation (pE2-intact CaCx cases compared to E2-disrupted cases. Bisulphite sequencing of LCR revealed overrepresentation of methylation at nucleotide 58 or other CpGs in E2BS-I/II, among E2-intact cases than E2-disrupted cases and lack of methylation at replication origin in case of both. The viral transcript (E7-E1∧E4) that produces the repressor E2 was analyzed by APOT (amplification of papillomavirus oncogenic transcript)-coupled-quantitative-RT-PCR (of E7 and E4 genes) to distinguish episomal (pure or concomitant with integrated) from purely integrated viral genomes based on the ratio, E7 CT/E4 CT. Relative quantification based on comparative CT (theshold cycle) method revealed 75.087 folds higher E7 mRNA expression in episomal cases over purely integrated cases. Viral load and E2 gene copy numbers were negatively correlated with E7 CT (p = 0.007) and E2 CT (pACTB CT, among episomal cases only. The k-means clustering analysis considering E7 CT from APOT-coupled-quantitative-RT-PCR assay, in conjunction with viral load, revealed immense heterogeneity among the HPV16 positive CaCx cases portraying integrated viral genomes. The findings provide novel insights into HPV16 related CaCx pathogenesis and highlight that CaCx cases that harbour episomal HPV16 genomes with intact E2 are likely to be distinct biologically, from the purely integrated viral genomes in terms of host genes and/or pathways involved in cervical carcinogenesis.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Distinct human papillomavirus type 16 methylomes in cervical cells at different stages of premalignancyVirology, 2009
- The dynamic DNA methylomes of double-stranded DNA viruses associated with human cancerGenome Research, 2009
- Effects of cellular differentiation, chromosomal integration and 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine treatment on human papillomavirus-16 DNA methylation in cultured cell linesVirology, 2008
- Integration of the HPV16 genome does not invariably result in high levels of viral oncogene transcriptsOncogene, 2007
- Human papillomavirus type distribution in invasive cervical cancer and high‐grade cervical lesions: A meta‐analysis updateInternational Journal of Cancer, 2007
- Human Papillomavirus Type 16 Integration in Cervical Carcinoma In Situ and in Invasive Cervical CancerJournal of Clinical Microbiology, 2006
- The Mitotic Chromosome Binding Activity of the Papillomavirus E2 Protein Correlates with Interaction with the Cellular Chromosomal Protein, Brd4Journal of Virology, 2005
- A comprehensive analysis of HPV integration loci in anogenital lesions combining transcript and genome-based amplification techniquesOncogene, 2003
- Association of human papillomavirus viral load with HPV16 and high-grade intraepithelial lesionInternational Journal of Gynecologic Cancer, 2003
- Papillomaviruses and cancer: from basic studies to clinical applicationNature Reviews Cancer, 2002