Abstract

Human papilloma virus (HPV) is the principal etiological agent of cervical cancer in women, and its DNA is present in virtually all of these tumors. However, exposure to the high-risk HPV types alone is insufficient for tumor development. Identifying specific collaborating factors that will lead to cervical cancer remains an unanswered question, especially because millions of women are exposed to HPV. Our earlier work using an in vitro model indicated that activation of the canonical Wnt pathway in HPV-positive epithelial cells was sufficient to induce anchorage independent growth. We therefore hypothesized that constitutive activation of this pathway might function as the “second hit.” To address this possibility, we developed two double-transgenic (DT) mouse models, K14-E7/ΔN87βcat and K14-HPV16/ΔN87βcat that express either the proteins encoded by the E7 oncogene or the HPV16 early region along with constitutively active β-catenin, which was expressed by linking it to the keratin-14 (K14) promoter. We initiated tumor formation by treating all groups with estrogen for six months. Invasive cervical cancer was observed in 11% of the K14-ΔN87βcat mice, expressing activated β-catenin and in 50% of the animals expressing the HPV16 E7 oncogene. In double-transgenic mice, coexpression of β-catenin and HPV16 E7 induced invasive cervical cancer at about 7 months in 94% of the cases. We did not observe cervical cancer in any group unless the mice were treated with estrogen. In the second model, K14-HPV16 mice suffered cervical dysplasias, but this phenotype was not augmented in HPV16/ΔN87βcat mice. In summary, the phenotypes of the K14-E7/ΔN87βcat mice support the hypothesis that activation of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway in HPV-associated premalignant lesions plays a functional role in accelerating cervical carcinogenesis.

Highlights

  • Cervical cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in women worldwide, and results in approximately 250,000 deaths each year from this Human papilloma virus (HPV)-related disease [1]

  • Generation of a transgenic mouse model to study the role of the Wnt signaling in HPV pathogenesis

  • Several animal models have been established in attempts to understand the biology of HPV-mediated tumorigenesis, [3,4,5]

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in women worldwide, and results in approximately 250,000 deaths each year from this HPV-related disease [1]. In one clinically relevant mouse model, the keratin-14 (K14) promoter drives the expression of the HPV E6/E7 oncogenes [6] in stratified squamous epithelium, including that of the skin and cervix These K14-HPV16 mice develop cervical pathologies only when they are treated with estrogen [7]. In the second mouse model, the same K14 promoter drives HPV16-E7 oncogene expression [4,9], which results in development of high-grade cervical dysplasia and invasive cervical malignancies in 80% of the animals [10]. That activation of canonical Wnt signaling is one of the potential mechanisms facilitating cervical cancer progression in HPV-infected cells To test this hypothesis, we generated two double-transgenic mouse models to determine whether b-catenin expression could induce tumors

Results
Discussion
Materials and Methods

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