Publication | Open Access
Reconstruction of Human Papillomavirus Type 16-Mediated Early-Stage Neoplasia Implicates E6/E7 Deregulation and the Loss of Contact Inhibition in Neoplastic Progression
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Citations
19
References
2012
Year
Viral ReplicationViral PathogenesisImmunologyPathologyTumor BiologyCancer-associated VirusOncologyHuman Papillomavirus VaccinesNeoplastic ProgressionViral Gene ExpressionMolecular PathologyVivo Disease StatesCancer ResearchVirologyContact InhibitionCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentMolecular VirologyPathogenesisMedicineViral OncologyPrecancerous Lesions
Infection with human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) can lead to low- or high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (LSIL or HSIL). Here we show that these in vivo disease states can be replicated in raft cultures of early-pass HPV-16 episomal cell lines, at both the level of pathology and the level of viral gene expression. A reduced responsiveness to cell-cell contact inhibition and an increase in E6/E7 activity correlated closely with phenotype. Similar deregulation is likely to underlie the appearance of LSIL or HSIL soon after infection.
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