Abstract

ABSTRACTThe life cycle of high-risk human papillomaviruses (HPVs) is dependent upon epithelial differentiation. Following infection of basal cells, HPV genomes are stably maintained at low copy numbers, and productive replication or amplification is restricted to highly differentiated suprabasal cells. In high-risk HPV infections, the ATM pathway is constitutively activated in the absence of external DNA-damaging agents and is required for productive viral replication. The ataxia telangiectasia (ATM) pathway repairs double-strand breaks in DNA, while the ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) pathway targets single-strand breaks. Our studies show that the ATR pathway, like the ATM pathway, is activated in HPV-positive cells and that inhibitors of ATR or CHK1 phosphorylation block both amplification and late viral gene expression in differentiated cells while moderately reducing stable copy numbers in undifferentiated cells. TopBP1 is a critical upstream activator of the ATR pathway and is expressed at elevated levels in HPV-positive cells. This increased expression of TopBP1 is necessary for ATR/CHK1 activation in HPV-positive cells, and knockdown blocks amplification. Furthermore, TopBP1 activation is shown to be regulated at the level of transcription initiation by the innate immune regulator STAT-5, which is activated by HPV proteins. STAT-5 has also been shown to be a regulator of the ATM response, demonstrating that these two pathways are coordinately regulated in HPV-positive cells. These findings identify a novel link between the innate immune response and activation of the ATR DNA damage response in regulating the life cycle of high-risk HPVs.

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