AI Article Synopsis

  • * Ectopic expression of oncogenes MYC and PIK3CAE545K enhances growth in these cells but enables tumor initiation only after several cell passages, despite lower expression levels of HPV E6 and E7 in late-passaged cells.
  • * To achieve tumorigenicity, additional activation of the RAS-MEK pathway is necessary, indicating that while HPV16 and certain oncogenes play a role, multiple genetic events are needed for cervical neoplasia progression.

Article Abstract

Deregulated expression of viral E6 and E7 genes often caused by viral genome integration of high-risk human papillomaviruses (HR-HPVs) into host DNA and additional host genetic alterations are thought to be required for the development of cervical cancer. However, approximately 15% of invasive cervical cancer specimens contain only episomal HPV genomes. In this study, we investigated the tumorigenic potential of human cervical keratinocytes harboring only the episomal form of HPV16 (HCK1T/16epi). We found that the HPV16 episomal form is sufficient for promoting cell proliferation and colony formation of parental HCK1T cells. Ectopic expression of host oncogenes, MYC and PIK3CAE545K, enhanced clonogenic growth of both early- and late-passage HCK1T/16epi cells, but conferred tumor-initiating ability only to late-passage HCK1T/16epi cells. Interestingly, the expression levels of E6 and E7 were rather lower in late-passage than in early-passage cells. Moreover, additional introduction of a constitutively active MEK1 (MEK1DD) and/or KRASG12V into HCK1T/16epi cells resulted in generation of highly potent tumor-initiating cells. Thus an in vitro model for progression of cervical neoplasia with episomal HPV16 was established. In the model, constitutively active mutation of PIK3CA, PIK3CAE545K, and overexpression of MYC, in the cells with episomal HPV16 genome were not sufficient, but an additional event such as activation of the RAS-MEK pathway was required for progression to tumorigenicity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9916646PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0281069PLOS

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