Human Papillomavirus (HPV) type 16 oncoprotein E7 plays a major role in cervical carcinogenesis by interacting with and functionally inactivating various host regulatory molecules. Long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) HOTAIR is one such regulator that recruits chromatin remodelling complex PRC2, creating gene silencing H3K27 me3 marks. Hence, we hypothesized that HOTAIR could be a potential target of E7, in HPV16 related cervical cancers (CaCx). We identified significant linear trend of progressive HOTAIR down-regulation through HPV negative controls, HPV16 positive non-malignants and CaCx samples. Majority of CaCx cases portrayed HOTAIR down-regulation in comparison to HPV negative controls, with corresponding up-regulation of HOTAIR target, HOXD10, and enrichment of cancer related pathways. However, a small subset had significantly higher HOTAIR expression, concomitant with high E7 expression and enrichment of metastatic pathways. Expression of HOTAIR and PRC2-complex members (EZH2 and SUZ12), showed significant positive correlation with E7 expression in CaCx cases and E7 transfected C33A cell line, suggestive of interplay between E7 and HOTAIR. Functional inactivation of HOTAIR by direct interaction with E7 could also be predicted by in silico analysis and confirmed by RNA-Immunoprecipitation. Our study depicts one of the causal mechanisms of cervical carcinogenesis by HPV16 E7, through modulation of HOTAIR expression and function.Cervical carcinoma (CaCx) is the second most prevalent cancer among women in India after breast cancer and the fourth most prevalent cancer among women worldwide 1,2 . Human Papillomavirus (HPV) is considered as the major etiologic contributor to the development of CaCx and is found in 99.7% of all the cases, of which, the high-risk types HPV16 and 18 are the most prevalent ones 3,4 . HPV16 alone contributes to more than 50% of the CaCx cases globally 5 . HPV16 acts by frequently integrating into the host chromosome and replicates along with the host genome, which results in E2 gene disruption and consistent expression of the two HPV oncoproteins E6 and E7 due to loss of E2 repressor activity 6 . The infected epithelial basal cells differentiate from the basal membrane to the superficial zone and the virus particles are shed with the sloughed-off epithelial cells. Moreover, E6 and E7 also facilitate persistence of episomal HPV genomes in undifferentiated cells of the cervical epithelium 7 . It is well established that oncoproteins E6 and E7 are the major transforming agents, leading to carcinogenesis. While E6 regulates the decay of the tumor suppressor p53, E7 leads to cellular
We tested the hypothesis that (i) synonymous variations within the coding regions, and (ii) variations within the non-coding regions of HPV, influence cervical cancer (CaCx) pathogenesis under the impact of intact HPV16 genomes. Whole genome sequence analysis of HPV16 isolates within 70 CaCx cases and 25 non-malignant samples revealed that synonymous variations were significantly higher within the E6 (p = 0.014), E5 (p = 0.001) and L2 (p = 0.0002) genes of HPV16 isolates within cases, compared to isolates within non-malignant samples. All of the 25 (100%) humanized codons identified within L2 ORF of the samples analyzed, were harbored by CaCx cases, while 8 out of 25 (32%) were harbored by HPV16 positive non-malignant samples (p = 3.87105E-07). L2 (mRNA and protein) expression was evident only among cases with episomal viral genomes and L2 mRNA expression correlated significantly with E2 gene copy numbers suggesting expression from all episomal genomes. Among such cases, Asian American (AA) isolates portrayed all of the humanized codons (100%; 4–6/sample) recorded within L2, which was significantly higher (p = 2.02E-7) compared to the European (E) isolates (22.8%; none or 1–2/sample). Additionally, majority of E variant isolates within cases (54/57; 94.7%) portrayed a variation (T4228C) within the short non-coding region (NCR2) between E5 and L2 genes, which portrays a weak promoter activity specific for L2 mRNA expression. This resulted in loss of 9 out of 14 miRNA binding sites (hsa-miR-548 family), despite the significant overexpression of miR548a-5p and miR548d-5p among such cases (28.64 and 36.25 folds, respectively), in comparison to HPV negative control samples. The findings exemplify the biological relevance of sequence variations in HPV16 genomes and highlight that episomal HPV16 in CaCx cases employ multiple mechanisms to sustain L2 expression, thereby justifying the potential role of L2 in such cancers, as opposed to those harboring viral integration.
The Homeobox (HOX) genes encode important transcription factors showing deregulated expression in several cancers. However, their role in cervical cancer pathogenesis, remains largely unexplored. Herein, we studied their association with Human Papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) mediated cervical cancers. Our previously published gene expression microarray data revealed a significant alteration of 12 out of 39 HOX cluster members among cervical cancer cases, in comparison to the histopathologically normal controls. Of these, we validated seven (HOXA10, HOXA13, HOXB13, HOXC8, HOXC9, HOXC11 and HOXD10) by quantitative real-time PCR. We identified decreased HOXA10 expression as opposed to the increased expression of the rest. Such decrease was independent of the integration status of HPV16 genome, but correlated negatively with E7 expression in clinical samples, that was confirmed in vitro. HOXA10 and HOXB13 revealed association with Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT). While HOXA10 expression correlated positively with E-Cadherin and negatively with Vimentin expression, HOXB13 showed the reverse trend. Chromatin immunoprecipitation study in vitro revealed the ability of E7 to increase HOX gene expression by epigenetic regulation, affecting the H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 status of their promoters, resulting from a loss of PRC2-LSD1 complex activity. Thus, besides identifying the deregulated expression of HOX cluster members in HPV16 positive cervical cancer and their association with EMT, our study highlighted the mechanism of HPV16 E7-mediated epigenetic regulation of HOX genes in such cancers, potentially serving as bedrock for functional studies in the future.
Epigenetic alterations within human papillomavirus (HPV) and host cellular genomes are known to occur during cervical carcinogenesis. Our objective was to analyse the influence of (1) methylation within two immunostimulatory CpG motifs within HPV16 E6 and E7 genes around the viral late promoter and their correlation, if any, with expression deregulation of host receptor (TLR9) and DNA methyltransferases (DNMT1, DNMT3A and DNMT3B) and (2) global DNA methylation levels within CpGs of the repetitive Alu sequences, on cervical cancer (CaCx) pathogenesis. Significantly higher proportions of CaCx samples portrayed methylation in immunostimulatory CpG motifs, compared to HPV16-positive non-malignant samples, with cases harbouring episomal HPV16 showing decreased methylation compared to those with viral integration. A significant linear trend of TLR9 upregulation was recorded in the order of HPV-negative controls < HPV16-positive non-malignant samples < HPV16-positive CaCx cases. TLR9 upregulation in cases with episomal HPV16 was again higher among those with non-methylated immunostimulatory CpG motifs. Comparison of cases with HPV-negative controls revealed that DNMT3A was significantly downregulated only among integrated cases, DNMT3B was significantly overexpressed among both categories of cases, although at variable levels, while DNMT1 failed to show any deregulated expression among the cases. Global host DNA hypomethylation, also showed a significant linear increasing trend through the progressive CaCx development stages mentioned above and was most prominently higher among cases with episomal HPV16 as opposed to viral integration. Thus, HPV16 and host methylations appear to influence CaCx pathogenesis, with differential molecular signatures among CaCx cases with episomal and integrated HPV16.
Heterogeneity in cervical cancers (CaCx) in terms of HPV16 physical status prompted us to investigate the mRNA and miRNA signatures among the different categories of CaCx samples. We performed microarray-based mRNA expression profiling and quantitative real-time PCR-based expression analysis of some prioritised miRNAs implicated in cancer-related pathways among various categories of cervical samples. Such samples included HPV16-positive CaCx cases that harboured either purely integrated HPV16 genomes (integrated) and those that harboured episomal viral genomes, either pure or concomitant with integrated viral genomes (episomal), which were compared with normal cervical samples that were either HPV negative or positive for HPV16. The mRNA expression profile differed characteristically between integrated and episomal CaCx cases for enriched biological pathways. miRNA expression profiles also differed among CaCx cases compared with controls (upregulation—miR-21, miR-16, miR-205, miR-323; downregulation—miR-143, miR-196b, miR-203, miR-34a; progressive upregulation—miR-21 and progressive downregulation—miR-143, miR-34a, miR-196b and miR-203) in the order of HPV-negative controls, HPV16-positive non-malignant samples and HPV16-positive CaCx cases. miR-200a was upregulated in HPV16-positive cervical tissues irrespective of histopathological status. Expression of majority of the predicted target genes was negatively correlated with their corresponding miRNAs, irrespective of the CaCx subtypes. E7 mRNA expression correlated positively with miR-323 expression among episomal cases and miR-203, among integrated cases. miR-181c expression was downregulated only among the episomal CaCx cases and negatively correlated with protein coding transcript of the proliferative target gene, CKS1B of the significantly enriched “G2/M DNA Damage Checkpoint Regulation” pathway among CaCx cases. Thus, the two CaCx subtypes are distinct entities at the molecular level, which could be differentially targeted for therapy. In fact, availability of a small molecule inhibitor of CKS1B, suggests that drugging CKS1B could be a potential avenue of treating the large majority of CaCx cases harbouring episomal HPV16.
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