Abstract
Several epidemiological and molecular studies have confirmed that cervical infection by certain human papillomaviruses (HPV) types is a precursor of the genesis of cervical neoplasia (Gravitt, 2011; Guzman-Olea et al., 2012). It is yet well elucidated that high risk genotypes lead to the development of cervical cancer and are also associated with other mucosal anogenital, head and neck tumors. The HPV genome is approximately 8 kb in length and is divided into three regions, the non-coding long control region (LCR, ~1 kb), and the protein coding early (E, ~4 kb) and late (L, ~3 kb) regions (Ganguly and Parihar, 2009). The viral genome encodes six early (E1, E2, E4, E5, E6 and E7) and two late (L1 and L2) proteins. HPV
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