| Literature DB >> 28384274 |
Alison A McBride1, Alix Warburton1.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28384274 PMCID: PMC5383336 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Fig 1Types of HPV integration.
A. Circular HPV genome. B. Linear HPV genome. URR (upstream regulatory region), PE (early promoter), and pAE and pAL (early and late polyadenylation sites) are indicated. The light blue circles in the URR represent E2 binding sites, and the dark blue square is the E1 binding site in the origin of replication (ori). C. In Type 1 integration, a single viral genome is integrated into the host DNA. In Type 2 integration, multiple genomes are integrated in tandem in a head-to-tail orientation. This often is accompanied by focal rearrangement and amplification of flanking cellular sequences.
Fig 2Models of integration events that promote oncogenesis.
The five integration models shown in Table 1 are shown in the diagram, as indicated to the left. URR (upstream regulatory region), and PE (early promoter), are indicated. The light blue circles in the URR represent E2 binding sites, and the dark blue square is the E1 binding site in the origin of replication (ori).
Integration events that promote oncogenesis.
| Integration event | Effect on oncogenic progression |
|---|---|
| Disruption of E2 gene | Abrogation of E2-mediated transcriptional repression of the E6/E7 promoter |
| Disruption of E2 binding sites by methylation | Abrogation of E2-mediated transcriptional repression of the E6/E7 promoter |
| Disruption of E1 gene | Abrogation of E1 replication activities that can induce DNA damage and growth arrest and promote focal genomic instability at the integration locus |
| Formation of viral—host fusion transcript | Hybrid E6/E7 transcripts are often more stable than viral E6/E7 transcripts |
| Tandem repeats of HPV genome/regulatory elements | Internal copies are usually silenced, but sometimes tandem copies of active genomes can function as a transcriptional super-enhancer |
| Altered regulation of cancer-associated genes in the vicinity of the integration locus | Integrated HPV can disrupt cellular genes and/or their flanking sequences, altering their expression and/or the expression of nearby genes; infrequently, HPV integration alters the expression of nearby cancer genes, thus promoting carcinogenesis |