Abstract

Human Papillomavirus is the major etiological agent in the development of cervical cancer but not a sufficient cause. Despite significant research, the underlying mechanisms of progression from a low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion to high grade squamous intraepithelial lesion are yet to be understood. Deregulation of viral gene expression and host genomic instability play a central role in virus-mediated carcinogenesis. Key events such as viral integration and epigenetic modifications may lead to the deregulation of viral and host gene expression. This review has summarized the available literature to describe the possible mechanism and role of viral integration in mediating carcinogenesis. HPV integration begins with DNA damage or double strand break induced either by oxidative stress or HPV proteins and the subsequent steps are driven by the DNA damage responses. Inflammation and oxidative stress could be considered as cofactors in stimulating viral integration and deregulation of cellular and viral oncogenes during the progression of cervical carcinoma. All these events together with the host and viral genetic and epigenetic modifications in neoplastic progression have also been reviewed which may be relevant in identifying a new preventive therapeutic strategy. In the absence of therapeutic intervention for HPV-infected individuals, future research focus should be directed towards preventing and reversing of HPV integration. DNA damage response, knocking out integrated HPV sequences, siRNA approach, modulating the selection mechanism of cells harboring integrated genomes and epigenetic modifiers are the possible therapeutic targets.

Highlights

  • Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women worldwide [1]

  • The precancerous lesions which progress to squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) are called cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) or squamous intraepithelial lesion (SIL) which is classified according to the grade of the lesion [6]

  • A productive HR-Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection may develop into low-grade SILs (LSILs) which are nonmalignant bearing the low risk of progression to malignancy and corresponding to Senapati et al Infectious Agents and Cancer (2016) 11:59

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women worldwide [1]. It is well known that high-risk HPV is the main etiological agent for this infectious viral carcinoma. The high-grade SILs (HSILs) comprise abortive virus infections in which there is deregulated expression of HPV early genes in basal epithelial cells, a greater risk of progression to invasive disease and corresponding to CIN2/3 [6]. The occasional association of Head-to-tail tandem repeats in the chromosome of cervical cancer cells [58, 59] leads to a plausible explanation that a linear concatemeric HPV genome is synthesized in cells by a rolling circle mechanism of replication and integrates into the host chromosome [60].

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