Abstract

Cervical cancer is a malignant transformation of keratinocytes initiated by the E7 oncoprotein of human papillomavirus (HPV). These tumors are characterized by keratinocyte hyperproliferation and are often infiltrated with activated CD8 T cells. HPV infection confers changes to gain immunological advantage to promote chronic infection, and these persist with malignant transformation. We investigated the relative importance of the many redundant mechanisms of cytotoxicity used by CD8 T cells to kill keratinocytes expressing HPV E7 oncoprotein using extended-duration time-lapse microscopy that allows examination of cell-to-cell interactions during killing. E7 expression by keratinocytes increased susceptibility to cell-mediated killing. However, while killing of non-transgenic keratinocytes was traditional, perforin-mediated, and caspase-dependent, E7-expression favored killing by perforin-independent, caspase-independent mechanisms. The roles of perforin, TNFα, IFNγ, Fas/FasL and PD1/PD-L1 were graded according to target cell survival to produce a hierarchy of killing mechanisms utilized in killing E7-expressing cells. TNFα was essential for perforin-mediated killing of E7-expressing cells, but not perforin-independent killing. IFNγ facilitated killing by Fas/FasL interaction, especially in the absence of perforin. Additionally, expression of E7 offered protection from killing by up regulation of PD-L1, Fas and FasL expression on keratinocytes promoting fight-back by target cells, resulting in effector cell death. This study shows that keratinocytes expressing E7 are highly susceptible to killing by CD8 T cells, but utilizing different armamentarium. Down-regulation of CD8 T cell cytotoxicity in HPV-related tumors may be due to suppression by E7-expressing keratinocytes. Immunotherapy for HPV-related cancers may be improved by suppression of PD-L1, or by suppression of FasL.

Highlights

  • Persisting human papillomavirus infection is the main cause of cervical and anal cancers, and has been implicated in a large number of other epithelial tumors including skin, esophageal, and head and neck cancers [1]

  • We investigated the relative importance of the many redundant mechanisms of cytotoxicity used by CD8 T cells to kill keratinocytes expressing human papillomavirus (HPV) E7 oncoprotein using extendedduration time-lapse microscopy that allows examination of cell-to-cell interactions during killing

  • We investigated the effects of expression of HPV E7 oncoprotein by primary keratinocytes (KC) on their susceptibility to killing by CD8 T cells

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Summary

Introduction

Persisting human papillomavirus infection is the main cause of cervical and anal cancers, and has been implicated in a large number of other epithelial tumors including skin, esophageal, and head and neck cancers [1]. HPV proteins E6 and E7 are expressed in all cervical cancers, and are responsible for the oncogenic progression of lesions by their suppressive action on the retinoblastoma gene product, resulting in KC proliferation and suppression of differentiation. HPV infection results www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget in maintaining cell cycling, preventing apoptosis, and preventing differentiation, due to expression of its two major oncoproteins, E6 and E7 [3]. The presence of CD8 T cells in cervical lesions is associated with a favorable prognosis, with their numbers inversely correlating with tumor progression [4, 5]. As skin graft rejection is CD8 T cell dependent, tolerance of E7expressing skin suggests that the E7 oncoprotein plays a role in inhibiting cell-mediated immune function in cervical cancers

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