Abstract

The accurate detection and diagnosis of cervical carcinoma and its malignant precursors (collectively referred to as high-grade cervical disease) represents one of the current challenges in clinical medicine and cytopathology. The advent of molecular diagnostics and the use of whole-genome profiling using DNA microarrays promises to yield improved understanding of the disease process with the subsequent development of more accurate diagnostic procedures based upon these discoveries. Recent reports describing a variety of experimental approaches have identified a series of candidate genes that are overexpressed in cervical carcinoma. In this article, representative examples of these markers and the resulting translational research will be reviewed within the context of improved cervical disease detection. An emerging class of markers, the minichromosome maintenance protein family of DNA licensing factors (MCM-2, MCM-6, MCM-7), shows promise for the specific detection of high-grade cervical disease using simple antibody-based immunochemistry formats. These proteins are overexpressed in cervical disease as a result of infection by oncogenic strains of human papillomavirus (HPV) and subsequent uncontrolled activation of gene transcription and aberrant S-phase induction, mediated through the E2F transcription factor pathway. This behavior appears to be a hallmark of high-grade cervical disease and provides the link between oncogenic HPV infections and the molecular behavior of cervical neoplasia (CN). The use of these molecular descriptors of CN in simple immunochemistry formats compatible with conventional cytology preparations is anticipated to improve the screening and detection of cervical disease within the healthcare system.

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