| Literature DB >> 25987895 |
Raffaella Ghittoni1, Rosita Accardi2, Susanna Chiocca3, Massimo Tommasino2.
Abstract
The human papillomavirus (HPV) family comprises more than 170 different types that preferentially infect the mucosa of the genitals, upper-respiratory tract, or the skin. The 'high-risk HPV type', a sub-group of mucosal HPVs, is the cause of approximately 5% of all human cancers, which corresponds to one-third of all virus-induced tumours. Within the high-risk group, HPV16 is the most oncogenic type, being responsible for approximatively 50% of all worldwide cervical cancers. Many studies suggest that, in addition to the high-risk mucosal HPV types, certain cutaneous HPVs also have a role in the development of non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC). Functional studies on the HPV early gene products showed that E6 and E7 play a key role in carcinogenesis. These two proteins use multiple mechanisms to evade host immune surveillance, allowing viral persistence, and to deregulate cell cycle and apoptosis control, thus facilitating the accumulation of DNA damage and ultimately cellular transformation. The demonstration that high-risk HPV types are the etiological agents of cervical cancer allowed the implementation in the clinical routine of novel screening strategies for cervical lesions, as well as the development of a very efficient prophylactic vaccine. Because of these remarkable achievements, there is no doubt that in the coming decades we will witness a dramatic reduction of cervical cancer incidence worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: HPV vaccines; carcinogenesis; papillomavirus
Year: 2015 PMID: 25987895 PMCID: PMC4431404 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2015.526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Mucosal HPV types (genus alpha) and main associated diseases.
| HPV type | Disease (% attributed cases) | |
|---|---|---|
| mucosal high-risk | HPV16 | Cervical squamous cell carcinoma (~50) |
| HPV18 | Cervical squamous cell carcinoma (~20) | |
| mucosal low-risk | HPV31, 33, 35, 39, 45, 51, 52, 56, 58, 59 | Cervical squamous cell carcinoma (~30) |
| HPV6, 11 | Benign genital lesions | |
| HPV13, 32 | Oral focal epithelial hyperplasia |
Biological properties of HPV Early proteins and their cellular targets.
| HPV protein | Functions | Cellular targets |
|---|---|---|
| E7 | major oncoprotein, cell cycle arrest | pRb, p107, p130 |
| E6 | major oncoprotein, cell proliferation, block apoptosis | p53, E6AP, CBP, p300, Bak, hTERT, MAGUK, cIAP, survivin |
| E5 | mediates mitogenic signal of growth factors/early stage transformation stage | — |
| E4 | destabilization of cytokeratin network | — |
| E2 | viral DNA replication and transcription | — |
| E1 | viral DNA replication | — |
Principal features of HPV prophylactic vaccines.
| Vaccine commercial name | HPV Types | Adjuvants | Production | Immunological response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gardasil-Merck | 16, 18, 6, 11 | Aluminium | Insect cells | Th1 |
| Cervarix-GSK | 16, 18 | Monophosphoryl lipid A | Yeast | Th1/Th2 |