Structure and transcription of integrated HPV DNA in vulvar carcinomas
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Published:2024-06-19
Issue:1
Volume:9
Page:
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ISSN:2056-7944
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Container-title:npj Genomic Medicine
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language:en
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Short-container-title:npj Genom. Med.
Author:
Van Arsdale AnneORCID, Turker Lauren, Chang Yoke-ChenORCID, Gould Joshua, Harmon Bryan, Maggi Elaine C.ORCID, Meshcheryakova Olga, Brown Maxwell P.ORCID, Luong Dana, Van Doorslaer Koenraad, Einstein Mark H., Kuo Dennis Y. S., Zheng DeyouORCID, Haas Brian J., Lenz Jack, Montagna CristinaORCID
Abstract
AbstractHPV infections are associated with a fraction of vulvar cancers. Through hybridization capture and DNA sequencing, HPV DNA was detected in five of thirteen vulvar cancers. HPV16 DNA was integrated into human DNA in three of the five. The insertions were in introns of human NCKAP1, C5orf67, and LRP1B. Integrations in NCKAP1 and C5orf67 were flanked by short direct repeats in the human DNA, consistent with HPV DNA insertions at sites of abortive, staggered, endonucleolytic incisions. The insertion in C5orf67 was present as a 36 kbp, human-HPV-hetero-catemeric DNA as either an extrachromosomal circle or a tandem repeat within the human genome. The human circularization/repeat junction was defined at single nucleotide resolution. The integrated viral DNA segments all retained an intact upstream regulatory region and the adjacent viral E6 and E7 oncogenes. RNA sequencing revealed that the only HPV genes consistently transcribed from the integrated viral DNAs were E7 and E6*I. The other two HPV DNA+ tumors had coinfections, but no evidence for integration. HPV-positive and HPV-negative vulvar cancers exhibited contrasting human, global gene expression patterns partially overlapping with previously observed differences between HPV-positive and HPV-negative cervical and oropharyngeal cancers. A substantial fraction of the differentially expressed genes involved immune system function. Thus, transcription and HPV DNA integration in vulvar cancers resemble those in other HPV-positive cancers. This study emphasizes the power of hybridization capture coupled with DNA and RNA sequencing to identify a broad spectrum of HPV types, determine human genome integration status of viral DNAs, and elucidate their structures.
Funder
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Cancer Institute
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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