AI Article Synopsis

  • There is strong evidence linking high-risk HPV types, particularly HPV16 and 18, to cervical cancer, which together account for about 70% of cases.
  • Differences in the viral oncoproteins, specifically E6 and E7, play a significant role in HPV's ability to cause cancer.
  • The study shows that while E6 from some low-risk HPV types can degrade certain proteins linked to cancer, the presence or behavior of these oncoproteins does not reliably predict whether an HPV type will cause cervical cancer.

Article Abstract

There is compelling evidence that high-risk human papillomaviruses (HPV) can cause cervical cancer. Strikingly, HPV16 and 18 account for approximately 70% of all cervical cancers, whereas phylogenetically related types are found at much lower frequencies. Most likely, differences in the activities of the viral E6 and E7 oncoproteins account for the in vivo carcinogenicity. We demonstrate here that E6 proteins from low-risk HPV70 and possibly high-risk HPV82 interact and degrade PDZ proteins hDlg and Magi1 identical to HPV16E6 and HPV18E6. In contrast high-risk HPV66E6 did not bind or degrade hDlg or Magi1. We also show that low-risk HPV70 E6/E7 immortalizes normal human keratinocytes. Together with our previous analysis concerning p53 degradation, this shows that neither binding of E6 to p53, to E6AP, to Magi1 and hDlg, the degradation of hDlg and Magi1, nor immortalization of normal human keratinocytes seems to be a reliable predictor for carcinogenic behavior of HPV in the cervix.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2009.02.018DOI Listing

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