Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Science Graduate Program in Molecular Medicine Mahidol University Bangkok Thailand
2. Department of Immunology Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital Bangkok Thailand
3. Faculty of Science Department of Biochemistry Mahidol University Bangkok Thailand
Abstract
AbstractBackground InformationThe precise etiology of breast cancer is not completely understood, although women with BRCA1 gene mutations have a significantly increased risk of developing the disease. In addition, sporadic breast cancer is frequently associated with decreased BRCA1 gene expression. Growing evidence of Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) infections in breast tumors has raised the possibility of the involvement of HPVs in the pathogenesis of breast cancer. We investigated whether the effects of HPV oncoproteins E6 and E7 were influenced by the expression levels of BRCA1. HPV16E6E7 (prototype or E6D25E/E7N29S Asian variant type) were stably expressed in MDA‐MB231 breast cancer cells, wild type for BRCA1, or with BRCA1 knocked down.ResultsExpression of HPV16E6E7 oncogenes did not affect BRCA1 levels and the abundance of HPV16E6E7 was not altered by BRCA1 knockdown. BRCA1 levels did not alter HPV16E6E7‐dependent degradation of G1‐S cell cycle proteins p53 and pRb. However, we found that the expression of G2‐M cell cycle protein cyclin B1 enhanced by HPV16E6E7 was impacted by BRCA1 levels. Especially, we found the correlation between BRCA1 and cyclin B1 expression and this was also confirmed in breast cancer samples from a Thai cohort. We further demonstrated that the combination of HPV oncoproteins and low levels of BRCA1 protein appears to enhance proliferation and invasion. Transactivation activities of HPV16E6E7 on genes regulating cell proliferation and invasion (TGF‐β and vimentin) were significantly increased in BRCA1‐deficient cells.ConclusionsOur results indicate that a deficiency of BRCA1 promotes the transactivation activity of HPV16E6E7 leading to increase of cell proliferation and invasion.SignificanceHPV infection appears to have the potential to enhance the aggressiveness of breast cancers, especially those deficient in BRCA1.