Publication | Closed Access
Dissection of human papillomavirus E6 and E7 function in transgenic mouse models of cervical carcinogenesis.
308
Citations
53
References
2003
Year
Transgenic Mouse ModelsPathologyCervical CarcinogenesisTumor BiologyCancer-associated VirusOncologyHuman Papillomavirus VaccinesCentrosome Copy NumberMolecular PathologyPublic HealthCancer ResearchHuman Cervix CancerE7 FunctionCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentCervical CancerTumor SuppressorMedicineViral OncologyPrecancerous Lesions
Human cervix cancer is caused by high-risk human papillomaviruses encoding E6 and E7 oncoproteins, each of which alter function of distinct targets regulating the cell cycle, apoptosis, and differentiation. Here we determined the molecular contribution of E6 or E7 to neoplastic progression and malignant growth in a transgenic mouse model of cervical carcinogenesis. E7 increased proliferation and centrosome copy number, and produced progression to multifocal microinvasive cervical cancers. E6 elevated centrosome copy number and eliminated detectable p53 protein, but did not produce neoplasia or cancer. E6 plus E7 additionally elevated centrosome copy number and created large, extensively invasive cancers. Centrosome copy number increases and p53 loss likely contributed to malignant growth; however, dysregulated proliferation and differentiation were required for carcinogenic progression.
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