Abstract

High-risk human papillomaviruses (HPVs) constitutively activate the ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) DNA damage response pathway, and this is required for viral replication. In fibroblasts, activated ATR regulates transcription of inflammatory genes through its negative effects on the autophagosome cargo protein p62. In addition, suppression of p62 results in increased levels of the transcription factor GATA4, leading to cellular senescence. In contrast, in HPV-positive keratinocytes, we observed that activation of ATR resulted in increased levels of phosphorylated p62, which in turn lead to reduced levels of GATA4. Knockdown of ATR in HPV-positive cells resulted in decreased p62 phosphorylation and increased GATA4 levels. Transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis of HPV-positive cells identified inflammatory genes and interferon factors as negative transcriptional targets of ATR. Furthermore, knockdown of p62 or overexpression of GATA4 in HPV-positive cells leads to inhibition of viral replication. These findings identify a novel role of the ATR/p62 signaling pathway in HPV-positive cells.IMPORTANCE High-risk human papillomaviruses (HPVs) infect epithelial cells and induce viral genome amplification upon differentiation. HPV proteins activate the ATR DNA damage repair pathway, and this is required for HPV genome amplification. In the present study, we show that HPV-induced ATR activation also leads to suppression of expression of inflammatory response genes. This suppression results from HPV-induced phosphorylation of the autophagosome cargo protein p62 which regulates the levels of the transcription factor GATA4. Activation of p62 in normal fibroblasts results in senescence, but this is not seen in HPV-positive keratinocytes. Importantly, knockdown of p62 or overexpression of GATA4 in HPV-positive cells abrogates viral replication. This study demonstrates that activation of ATR in HPV-positive cells triggers a p62-directed pathway inducing suppression of inflammatory gene expression independent of DNA repair and facilitating HPV replication.

Highlights

  • High-risk human papillomaviruses (HPVs) constitutively activate the ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) DNA damage response pathway, and this is required for viral replication

  • We show that in HPV-positive cells ATR activation suppresses expression of genes in immune response pathways, including many inflammatory genes, as well as IFN-␬

  • The mechanism behind this regulation of transcription by ATR is through the phosphorylation of the autophagy factor p62 which in turn controls the stability of its binding partner, the transcriptional factor GATA4

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Summary

Introduction

High-risk human papillomaviruses (HPVs) constitutively activate the ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) DNA damage response pathway, and this is required for viral replication. We show that HPV-induced ATR activation leads to suppression of expression of inflammatory response genes This suppression results from HPV-induced phosphorylation of the autophagosome cargo protein p62 which regulates the levels of the transcription factor GATA4. This study demonstrates that activation of ATR in HPVpositive cells triggers a p62-directed pathway inducing suppression of inflammatory gene expression independent of DNA repair and facilitating HPV replication. The E1^E4 and E5 proteins as well as two capsid proteins L1 and L2 are expressed primarily in highly differentiated cells [10] Both the ATM and ATR DDR pathways are constitutively activated by high-risk HPV E1, E6, and E7 proteins alone independent of viral replication [11, 12]

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