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Changes in the Proteome in the Development of Chronic Human Papillomavirus Infection—A Prospective Study in HIV Positive and HIV Negative Rwandan Women

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Cervical cancer is the predominant cause of female cancer deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa. Chronic infection of the uterine cervix by the human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most important factor for the development of cervical cancer. HPV screening may be used to screen out women at risk...

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Autores principales: Bienvenu, Emile, Mukanyangezi, Marie Francoise, Rulisa, Stephen, Martner, Anna, Hasséus, Bengt, Vorontsov, Egor, Tobin, Gunnar, Giglio, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8656715/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34885095
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13235983
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author Bienvenu, Emile
Mukanyangezi, Marie Francoise
Rulisa, Stephen
Martner, Anna
Hasséus, Bengt
Vorontsov, Egor
Tobin, Gunnar
Giglio, Daniel
author_facet Bienvenu, Emile
Mukanyangezi, Marie Francoise
Rulisa, Stephen
Martner, Anna
Hasséus, Bengt
Vorontsov, Egor
Tobin, Gunnar
Giglio, Daniel
author_sort Bienvenu, Emile
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Cervical cancer is the predominant cause of female cancer deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa. Chronic infection of the uterine cervix by the human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most important factor for the development of cervical cancer. HPV screening may be used to screen out women at risk of cervical cancer; however, the majority of HPV infections will eventually heal, and at present, there are no screening methods to detect which HPV infections that will become chronic. In the present study, we followed HIV-negative and HIV-positive Rwandan women with cervical HPV infections for two years with repeated samplings from the uterine cervix. We identified protein biomarkers that correlate with the potential risk for women to develop cervical cancer. By including the identified biomarkers in cervical screening programs, we are able, potentially, to identify those women with cervical HPV infections, who should be carefully monitored in the future. ABSTRACT: Background: Effects on the proteome when a high risk (HR)-HPV infection occurs, when it is cleared and when it becomes chronic were investigated. Moreover, biomarker panels that could identify cervical risk lesions were assessed. Methods: Cytology, HPV screening and proteomics were performed on cervical samples from Rwandan HIV+ and HIV- women at baseline, at 9 months, at 18 months and at 24 months. Biological pathways were identified using the String database. Results: The most significantly affected pathway when an incident HR-HPV infection occurred was neutrophil degranulation, and vesicle-mediated transport was the most significantly affected pathway when an HR-HPV infection was cleared; protein insertion into membrane in chronic HR-HPV lesions and in lesions where HR-HPVs were cleared were compared; and cellular catabolic process in high-grade lesions was compared to that in negative lesions. A four-biomarker panel (EIF1; BLOC1S5; LIMCH1; SGTA) was identified, which was able to distinguish chronic HR-HPV lesions from cleared HR-HPV/negative lesions (sensitivity 100% and specificity 91%). Another four-biomarker panel (ERH; IGKV2-30; TMEM97; DNAJA4) was identified, which was able to distinguish high-grade lesions from low-grade/negative lesions (sensitivity 100% and specificity 81%). Conclusions: We have identified the biological pathways triggered in HR-HPV infection, when HR-HPV becomes chronic and when cervical risk lesions develop. Moreover, we have identified potential biomarkers that may help to identify women with cervical risk lesions.
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spelling pubmed-86567152021-12-10 Changes in the Proteome in the Development of Chronic Human Papillomavirus Infection—A Prospective Study in HIV Positive and HIV Negative Rwandan Women Bienvenu, Emile Mukanyangezi, Marie Francoise Rulisa, Stephen Martner, Anna Hasséus, Bengt Vorontsov, Egor Tobin, Gunnar Giglio, Daniel Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Cervical cancer is the predominant cause of female cancer deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa. Chronic infection of the uterine cervix by the human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most important factor for the development of cervical cancer. HPV screening may be used to screen out women at risk of cervical cancer; however, the majority of HPV infections will eventually heal, and at present, there are no screening methods to detect which HPV infections that will become chronic. In the present study, we followed HIV-negative and HIV-positive Rwandan women with cervical HPV infections for two years with repeated samplings from the uterine cervix. We identified protein biomarkers that correlate with the potential risk for women to develop cervical cancer. By including the identified biomarkers in cervical screening programs, we are able, potentially, to identify those women with cervical HPV infections, who should be carefully monitored in the future. ABSTRACT: Background: Effects on the proteome when a high risk (HR)-HPV infection occurs, when it is cleared and when it becomes chronic were investigated. Moreover, biomarker panels that could identify cervical risk lesions were assessed. Methods: Cytology, HPV screening and proteomics were performed on cervical samples from Rwandan HIV+ and HIV- women at baseline, at 9 months, at 18 months and at 24 months. Biological pathways were identified using the String database. Results: The most significantly affected pathway when an incident HR-HPV infection occurred was neutrophil degranulation, and vesicle-mediated transport was the most significantly affected pathway when an HR-HPV infection was cleared; protein insertion into membrane in chronic HR-HPV lesions and in lesions where HR-HPVs were cleared were compared; and cellular catabolic process in high-grade lesions was compared to that in negative lesions. A four-biomarker panel (EIF1; BLOC1S5; LIMCH1; SGTA) was identified, which was able to distinguish chronic HR-HPV lesions from cleared HR-HPV/negative lesions (sensitivity 100% and specificity 91%). Another four-biomarker panel (ERH; IGKV2-30; TMEM97; DNAJA4) was identified, which was able to distinguish high-grade lesions from low-grade/negative lesions (sensitivity 100% and specificity 81%). Conclusions: We have identified the biological pathways triggered in HR-HPV infection, when HR-HPV becomes chronic and when cervical risk lesions develop. Moreover, we have identified potential biomarkers that may help to identify women with cervical risk lesions. MDPI 2021-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8656715/ /pubmed/34885095 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13235983 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bienvenu, Emile
Mukanyangezi, Marie Francoise
Rulisa, Stephen
Martner, Anna
Hasséus, Bengt
Vorontsov, Egor
Tobin, Gunnar
Giglio, Daniel
Changes in the Proteome in the Development of Chronic Human Papillomavirus Infection—A Prospective Study in HIV Positive and HIV Negative Rwandan Women
title Changes in the Proteome in the Development of Chronic Human Papillomavirus Infection—A Prospective Study in HIV Positive and HIV Negative Rwandan Women
title_full Changes in the Proteome in the Development of Chronic Human Papillomavirus Infection—A Prospective Study in HIV Positive and HIV Negative Rwandan Women
title_fullStr Changes in the Proteome in the Development of Chronic Human Papillomavirus Infection—A Prospective Study in HIV Positive and HIV Negative Rwandan Women
title_full_unstemmed Changes in the Proteome in the Development of Chronic Human Papillomavirus Infection—A Prospective Study in HIV Positive and HIV Negative Rwandan Women
title_short Changes in the Proteome in the Development of Chronic Human Papillomavirus Infection—A Prospective Study in HIV Positive and HIV Negative Rwandan Women
title_sort changes in the proteome in the development of chronic human papillomavirus infection—a prospective study in hiv positive and hiv negative rwandan women
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8656715/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34885095
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13235983
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