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Dangerous Liaisons: Long-Term Replication with an Extrachromosomal HPV Genome

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13091846

Keywords

HPV; papillomavirus; integration; DNA damage response; replication; fragile sites; partitioning; enhancers

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Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program of the NIAID, NIH [AI000713]

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Papillomaviruses cause persistent infections on the mucosal and cutaneous surfaces, potentially leading to cancer. The viral genome replicates in infected cells using the cellular replication machinery, generating progeny virions.
Papillomaviruses cause persistent, and usually self-limiting, infections in the mucosal and cutaneous surfaces of the host epithelium. However, in some cases, infection with an oncogenic HPV can lead to cancer. The viral genome is a small, double-stranded circular DNA molecule that is assembled into nucleosomes at all stages of infection. The viral minichromosome replicates at a low copy number in the nucleus of persistently infected cells using the cellular replication machinery. When the infected cells differentiate, the virus hijacks the host DNA damage and repair pathways to replicate viral DNA to a high copy number to generate progeny virions. This strategy is highly effective and requires a close association between viral and host chromatin, as well as cellular processes associated with DNA replication, repair, and transcription. However, this association can lead to accidental integration of the viral genome into host DNA, and under certain circumstances integration can promote oncogenesis. Here we describe the fate of viral DNA at each stage of the viral life cycle and how this might facilitate accidental integration and subsequent carcinogenesis.

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