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Human Papillomaviruses; Epithelial Tropisms, and the Development of Neoplasia

Papillomaviruses have evolved over many millions of years to propagate themselves at specific epithelial niches in a range of different host species. This has led to the great diversity of papillomaviruses that now exist, and to the appearance of distinct strategies for epithelial persistence. Many...

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Autores principales: Egawa, Nagayasu, Egawa, Kiyofumi, Griffin, Heather, Doorbar, John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4517131/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26193301
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v7072802
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author Egawa, Nagayasu
Egawa, Kiyofumi
Griffin, Heather
Doorbar, John
author_facet Egawa, Nagayasu
Egawa, Kiyofumi
Griffin, Heather
Doorbar, John
author_sort Egawa, Nagayasu
collection PubMed
description Papillomaviruses have evolved over many millions of years to propagate themselves at specific epithelial niches in a range of different host species. This has led to the great diversity of papillomaviruses that now exist, and to the appearance of distinct strategies for epithelial persistence. Many papillomaviruses minimise the risk of immune clearance by causing chronic asymptomatic infections, accompanied by long-term virion-production with only limited viral gene expression. Such lesions are typical of those caused by Beta HPV types in the general population, with viral activity being suppressed by host immunity. A second strategy requires the evolution of sophisticated immune evasion mechanisms, and allows some HPV types to cause prominent and persistent papillomas, even in immune competent individuals. Some Alphapapillomavirus types have evolved this strategy, including those that cause genital warts in young adults or common warts in children. These strategies reflect broad differences in virus protein function as well as differences in patterns of viral gene expression, with genotype-specific associations underlying the recent introduction of DNA testing, and also the introduction of vaccines to protect against cervical cancer. Interestingly, it appears that cellular environment and the site of infection affect viral pathogenicity by modulating viral gene expression. With the high-risk HPV gene products, changes in E6 and E7 expression are thought to account for the development of neoplasias at the endocervix, the anal and cervical transformation zones, and the tonsilar crypts and other oropharyngeal sites. A detailed analysis of site-specific patterns of gene expression and gene function is now prompted.
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spelling pubmed-45171312015-07-28 Human Papillomaviruses; Epithelial Tropisms, and the Development of Neoplasia Egawa, Nagayasu Egawa, Kiyofumi Griffin, Heather Doorbar, John Viruses Review Papillomaviruses have evolved over many millions of years to propagate themselves at specific epithelial niches in a range of different host species. This has led to the great diversity of papillomaviruses that now exist, and to the appearance of distinct strategies for epithelial persistence. Many papillomaviruses minimise the risk of immune clearance by causing chronic asymptomatic infections, accompanied by long-term virion-production with only limited viral gene expression. Such lesions are typical of those caused by Beta HPV types in the general population, with viral activity being suppressed by host immunity. A second strategy requires the evolution of sophisticated immune evasion mechanisms, and allows some HPV types to cause prominent and persistent papillomas, even in immune competent individuals. Some Alphapapillomavirus types have evolved this strategy, including those that cause genital warts in young adults or common warts in children. These strategies reflect broad differences in virus protein function as well as differences in patterns of viral gene expression, with genotype-specific associations underlying the recent introduction of DNA testing, and also the introduction of vaccines to protect against cervical cancer. Interestingly, it appears that cellular environment and the site of infection affect viral pathogenicity by modulating viral gene expression. With the high-risk HPV gene products, changes in E6 and E7 expression are thought to account for the development of neoplasias at the endocervix, the anal and cervical transformation zones, and the tonsilar crypts and other oropharyngeal sites. A detailed analysis of site-specific patterns of gene expression and gene function is now prompted. MDPI 2015-07-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4517131/ /pubmed/26193301 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v7072802 Text en © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Egawa, Nagayasu
Egawa, Kiyofumi
Griffin, Heather
Doorbar, John
Human Papillomaviruses; Epithelial Tropisms, and the Development of Neoplasia
title Human Papillomaviruses; Epithelial Tropisms, and the Development of Neoplasia
title_full Human Papillomaviruses; Epithelial Tropisms, and the Development of Neoplasia
title_fullStr Human Papillomaviruses; Epithelial Tropisms, and the Development of Neoplasia
title_full_unstemmed Human Papillomaviruses; Epithelial Tropisms, and the Development of Neoplasia
title_short Human Papillomaviruses; Epithelial Tropisms, and the Development of Neoplasia
title_sort human papillomaviruses; epithelial tropisms, and the development of neoplasia
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4517131/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26193301
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v7072802
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