Human papilloma virus is a causative factor in the etiology of cervical cancer with HPV16 being the most prevalent genotype associated with it. Intratype variations in oncogenic E6/E7 and capsid L1 proteins of HPV 16 besides being of phylogenetic importance, are associated with risk of viral persistence and progression. The objective of this multicentric study was to identify HPV-16 E6, E7 and L1 variants prevalent in India and their possible biological effects. Squamous cell cervical cancer biopsies were collected from 6 centres in India and examined for the presence of HPV 16. Variants of HPV-16 were characterized by full length sequence analysis of L1, E6 and E7 genes in 412 samples. Similar distribution of the variants was seen from the different centres/regions, with the European variant E350G being the most prevalent (58%), followed by American Asian variant (11.4%). Fifty six changes were seen in E6 region, 31 being nonsynonymous. The most frequent being L83V (72.3%), Q14H (13.1%) and H78Y (12.1%). Twenty-nine alterations were seen in E7 region, with 12 being nonsynonymous. The most frequent being F57V (9%). L1 region showed 204 changes, of which 67 were nonsynonymous. The most frequent being 448insS (100%), and 465delD (100%), H228D (94%), T292A (85%). The identified variants some new and some already reported can disrupt pentamer formation, transcriptional regulation of the virus, L1 protein interface interaction, B and T cell epitopes, p53 degradation, and thus their distribution is important for development of HPV diagnostics, vaccine, and for therapeutic purpose. '
UICCKey words: cervical cancer; human papilloma virus 16; variants Cervical cancer is the second most predominant cancer worldwide. 1 In India it is the most common cancer amongst women, accounting for 130,000 new cases and more than 70,000 deaths annually. Persistent infection with high risk Human papilloma virus (HPV) is the main aetiological factor in the development of cervical cancer and may depend on HPV genotypes and variants. 2 HPV-16 is the most prevalent genotype associated with cervical carcinomas globally, as well as in Indian women. [3][4][5] This could perhaps be because of differential HPV-16 variant frequency, with certain variants conferring greater oncogenecity. 6,7 The molecular variants or lineages differ in nucleotide sequence by no more than 2% in the coding region and 5% in the noncoding regions of the viral genome with respect to the prototype. 8 Through nucleotide sequence comparisons, it has been found that HPV-16 has evolved along 5 major phylogenetic branches i.e., European, Asian, Asian American, African-1 and African-2. 9 Intratypic variation of HPV-16 has been shown to be an important predictor of progression to clinical relevant cervical lesion. 10 In a cohort study of young women 16 different HPV variants were found, one of which persisted over time, although the other variants were transiently detected. 11 Considerable intratypic diversity of HPV-16 has been reported by other studies based on DNA sequenc...