| Literature DB >> 29914057 |
Domenico Mattoscio1,2, Alessandro Medda3, Susanna Chiocca4.
Abstract
Human papilloma viruses (HPVs) are a group of double-stranded DNA viruses known to be the primary cause of cervical cancer. In addition, evidence has now established their role in non-melanoma skin cancers, head and neck cancer (HNC), and the development of other anogenital malignancies. The prevalence of HPV-related HNC, in particular oropharyngeal cancers, is rapidly increasing, foreseeing that HPV-positive oropharyngeal cancers will outnumber uterine cervical cancers in the next 15⁻20 years. Therefore, despite the successful advent of vaccines originally licensed for cervical cancer prevention, HPV burden is still very high, and a better understanding of HPV biology is urgently needed. Autophagy is the physiological cellular route that accounts for removal, degradation, and recycling of damaged organelles, proteins, and lipids in lysosomal vacuoles. In addition to this scavenger function, autophagy plays a fundamental role during viral infections and cancers and is, therefore, frequently exploited by viruses to their own benefit. Recently, a link between HPV and autophagy has clearly emerged, leading to the conceivable development of novel anti-viral strategies aimed at restraining HPV infectivity. Here, recent findings on how oncogenic HPV16 usurp autophagy are described, highlighting similarities and differences with mechanisms adopted by other oncoviruses.Entities:
Keywords: HPV; autophagy; cervical cancer; head and neck cancer; oncoviral proteins; viral tumorigenesis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29914057 PMCID: PMC6032050 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19061775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1HPV16 binding and internalization inhibits autophagosome formation. HPV virions decorated with HPSGs interact with EGFRs present on the plasma membrane of target cells, resulting in Akt and PTEN phosphorylation, and in phosphorylation and activation of mTOR. Activated mTOR phosphorylates and inactivates ULK1, present on isolation membranes, inhibiting autophagosome nucleation and, therefore, delays L1 digestion and capsid degradation inside autophagosomes. Arrows indicate activating pathways; T-bar indicates inhibitory pathway; blue lines represent cellular and isolation membranes.
Figure 2HPV16 oncoproteins dampen the host autophagic response acting at different levels of the autophagic pathway. E5 interferes with the transcriptional activation of the autophagic machinery down-regulating Beclin 1, ATG5, LC3, ULK1, ULK2, ATG4a, and ATG7 mRNAs, thus suggesting inhibition of phagophore assembly, while E6 and E7 inhibit autophagosome/lysosome fusion may be due to depletion of autophagic genes. Arrows indicate activating pathways; T-bars indicate inhibitory pathways.
Autophagy alterations during HPV-mediated tumor progression. Up and down arrows indicate increased and decreased expression of the reported proteins, respectively. ATAD3A: ATPase family AAA domain containing 3A.
| Tumor | Autophagic Protein Altered | Putative Use as Biomarker | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anal dysplasia | LC3↑, p62↑ | Diagnosis, progression | [ |
| Cervical dysplasia | p62↑ | Diagnosis, progression | [ |
| Beclin 1↓ | Diagnosis, progression, prognosis | [ | |
| miR-224-3p↑, FIP200↓ | Diagnosis, progression | [ | |
| Cervical cancer | LC3↓ | HPV infection, diagnosis, prognosis | [ |
| ATAD3A↑ | HPV infection, diagnosis, prognosis, therapeutic predictivity | [ | |
| miR-224-3p↑, FIP200↓ | Diagnosis | [ | |
| miR-155-5p↓ | Diagnosis | [ |