Abstract

Simple SummaryHigh-risk strains of human papillomavirus (HPV) such as HPV16 cause anogenital and oropharyngeal cancers, with HPV-associated cervical cancer being the fourth most common cancer worldwide and a major cause of death for women. Anti-HPV vaccines are available but coverage is low, and while the vaccines prevent infection they are not therapeutic for treating cancers in individuals already infected with high-risk HPV. Instead, current treatments for HPV-associated cancers include surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation, and affect diseased and healthy tissues alike. Accordingly, there is a dire need for better, molecularly targeted strategies. Herein, we report the novel finding that at least four protease inhibitor drugs currently used to treat HIV/AIDS—lopinavir, ritonavir, nelfinavir, and saquinavir—cause marked and selective depletion of HPV16 E6 and E7 oncoproteins in HPV-positive cancer cells and a 3-D cell culture model for HPV16-positive epithelial pre-cancer (NIKS16 cells). E6 and E7 depletion correlated with anticancer phenotypes including increased p53 protein levels and induction of cell growth arrest in CaSki cells as well as slowed epithelium growth and reversal of HPV16-driven phenotypes consistent with inhibition of the cellular autophagy pathway in the NIKS16 model. Based on this progress in vitro, we propose that HIV protease inhibitors, already known to have anticancer properties, be studied further in the context of developing a targeted therapy for HPV16-driven cancers and pre-cancers.High-risk human papillomavirus strain 16 (HPV16) causes oral and anogenital cancers through the activities of two viral oncoproteins, E6 and E7, that dysregulate the host p53 and pRb tumor suppressor pathways, respectively. The maintenance of HPV16-positive cancers requires constitutive expression of E6 and E7. Therefore, inactivating these proteins could provide the basis for an anticancer therapy. Herein we demonstrate that a subset of aspartyl protease inhibitor drugs currently used to treat HIV/AIDS cause marked reductions in HPV16 E6 and E7 protein levels using two independent cell culture models: HPV16-transformed CaSki cervical cancer cells and NIKS16 organotypic raft cultures (a 3-D HPV16-positive model of epithelial pre-cancer). Treatment of CaSki cells with some (lopinavir, ritonavir, nelfinavir, and saquinavir) but not other (indinavir and atazanavir) protease inhibitors reduced E6 and E7 protein levels, correlating with increased p53 protein levels and decreased cell viability. Long-term (>7 day) treatment of HPV16-positive NIKS16 raft cultures with saquinavir caused epithelial atrophy with no discernible effects on HPV-negative rafts, demonstrating selectivity. Saquinavir also reduced HPV16′s effects on markers of the cellular autophagy pathway in NIKS16 rafts, a hallmark of HPV-driven pre-cancers. Taken together, these data suggest HIV-1 protease inhibitors be studied further in the context of treating or preventing HPV16-positive cancers.

Highlights

  • Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are non-enveloped DNA tumor viruses that infect stratified squamous epithelial tissues

  • human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) drugs on human papillomavirus strain 16 (HPV16) gene expresTo testwe the first effectscompared of a subset ofthe commonly

  • Compared to otherwise identical rafts treated with vehicle control, with no negative effects of SQV on HPV-negative NIKS16 rafts when (NIKS) rafts (Figure 5c,d). These results indicated that SQV was able to inactivate E7 in the context of a stratified epithelium and, interestingly, could cause significant reductions of overall HPV16-positive cell growth over time

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Summary

Introduction

Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are non-enveloped DNA tumor viruses that infect stratified squamous epithelial tissues. High-risk mucosotropic strains cause over 99% of cervical cancers, most other epithelial anogenital cancers, and a subset of head and neck cancers. Anti-HPV vaccines are non-therapeutic and coverage remains low; e.g., only 68% of adolescents in the U.S received the first of two prescribed doses in 2018 [3]. Nearly 200,000 pre-cancer cases are still diagnosed each year, with ~11,000 cases of full-blown cancer causing ~4000 deaths annually [4]. Current approaches to treat HPVassociated cancers include surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy, with pre-cancerous cervical lesions treated using ablative procedures such as the Loop Electrosurgical Excision

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