| Literature DB >> 35955700 |
J Omar Muñoz-Bello1, Adela Carrillo-García1, Marcela Lizano1,2.
Abstract
Cervical cancer (CC) continues to be a major public health problem in Mexico, ranking second among cancers in women. A persistent infection with human papillomaviruses (HPV) is the main risk factor for CC development. In addition, a significant fraction of other cancers including those of the anus, oropharynx, and penis are also related to HPV infection. In CC, HPV-16 is the most prevalent high-risk HPV type, followed by HPV-18, both being responsible for 70% of cases. HPV intratype variant lineages differ in nucleotide sequences by 1-10%, while sublineages differ by 0.5-1%. Several studies have postulated that the nucleotide changes that occur between HPV intratype variants are reflected in functional differences and in pathogenicity. Moreover, it has been demonstrated that HPV-16 and -18 intratype variants differentially affect molecular processes in infected cells, changing their biological behavior that finally impacts in the clinical outcome of patients. Mexico has participated in providing knowledge on the geographical distribution of intratype variants of the most prevalent HPVs in premalignant lesions of the cervix and cervical cancer, as well as in other HPV-related tumors. In addition, functional studies have been carried out to assess the cellular effects of intratype variations in HPV proteins. This review addresses the state of the art on the epidemiology of HPV-16 and HPV-18 intratype variants in the Mexican population, as well as their association with persistence, precancer and cervical cancer, and functional aspects related to their biological behavior.Entities:
Keywords: HPV; Mexico; cervical cancer; variants
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35955700 PMCID: PMC9368912 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23158566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
HPV-16 and -18 variants commonly found in cancer among Mexican patients.
| Region | HPV | HPV Gene | Variant/Sublineage | Prevalence in Cancer | Cancer Risk (OR) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico City | 16 | E6/L1 | D2 (AA-c) | 23.2% | 27 | [ |
| D3 (AA-a) | ||||||
| European | 27.1% | 3.4 | ||||
| Mexico City | 16 | E6/L1/LCR | A1/A2 | 31.2% | 1.3 | [ |
| D2 | 10.8% | 3.3 | ||||
| D3 | 8.9% | 0.6 | ||||
| Mexico City | 16 | E6 | European | 58% | - | [ |
| D3 (AA-a) | 32.3% | - | ||||
| D2 (AA-c) | 8.8% | - | ||||
| Mexico City | 16 | E6 | E350G | 80.77% | - | [ |
| Mexico City, Mexico State, Jalisco | 16 | E6/LCR | A1/A2 | 82% | - | [ |
| Mexico City | 18 | E6/LCR | European | 62% | - | [ |
| Af | 24% | - | ||||
| AsAi | 14% | - | ||||
| Guerrero | 16 | E6 | E350G | 40% | - | [ |
| AA-a | 10.6% | 69 | ||||
| Guerrero | 16 | E7 | E7-prototype (A1, A2) | 74.74% | 1 | [ |
| E7-C732/C789/G795 (D2) | 20.53% | 3.79 | ||||
| E6/E7 | E6-AA-a/E7- C732/C789/G795 (D2) | 11.1% | 110 | |||
| E6-AA-c/E7- C732/C789/G795 (D2) | 8.9% | 35 | ||||
| Yucatan | 16 | E6 | D2 (AA) | 44% | - | [ |
Figure 1Regulation of the Long Control Region activity by HPV variations. (a) HPV-16 positive tumors with E2 AA contain a higher number of viral copies per cell and (b) higher E6/E7 transcript levels, in relation to those with E2 E. (c) In the presence of HPV18 E1- and E2 AsAi, the Ori site of the AsAi variant exhibit a higher replication rate compared to the Ori sites of E and Af variants. (d) When E1 and Ori sites came from the same variant, E1 Af induced the highest Ori viral replication compared to E1 E and AsAi variants, while variations in E2 had no effect. (e) Through Luc-reporter plasmid assays, it was shown that HPV-18 LCR Af has a lower transcriptional activity, compared to LCR AsAi or E, suggesting an impact in E6/E7 expression. Figure created in BioRender.
Figure 2Functional analysis of HPV E6 variants. (a) Gene expression profiles of HPV-16 and -18 E6 variants expressing cells. HPV-16 E6 E-P regulates the expression of 266 genes, while the other E6 variants together induced 436 genes, mainly involved in cell signaling, transcription, and adhesion. Furthermore, E6 AsAi and Af from HPV-18 induce the expression of 1945 genes and 2236 genes, respectively, affecting different cellular processes. (b) E6 AA-c increases the expression of MINCR, a competitive endogenous RNA of miR-28-5p, preventing the degradation of RAP1B transcript. (c) HPV-18 E6 AsAi and E variants exhibit different E6 splicing patterns, being E6 full-length the most prevalent isoform, in contrast E6 Af showed a higher proportion of the small-spliced isoform E6*I, impacting p53 and p14ARF protein levels. (d) HPV-18 E6 Af variant induces higher TCF-4 transcriptional activity than E6 AsAi. Both variants bind to TCF-4/β-catenin and induce Cyclin D1 and Axin2 expression. (e) HPV-18 E6 AsAi and E variants promote overactivation of the PI3K/AKT pathway compared to E6 Af, differentially impacting proliferation. When indicated, up arrows mean augmented levels, where enlarged arrows refer to higher levels than the short arrows. Down arrows indicate decreased levels. Figure created in BioRender.