Litcius/Paper detail

HPV integration and cervical cancer: a failed evolutionary viral trait

Mariano A. Molina, Renske D.M. Steenbergen, Anna Elisabeth Pumpe, Angelique N. Kenyon, Willem J. G. Melchers

2024Trends in Molecular Medicine108 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Countless efforts have been made to eradicate cervical cancer worldwide, including improving disease screening and human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programs. Nevertheless, cervical cancer still claims the lives of more than 300 000 women every year. Persistent infections with high-risk HPV genotypes 16 and 18 are the main cause of cancer and may result in HPV integration into the host genome. The central dogma is that HPV integration is an important step in oncogenesis, but in fact, it impedes the virus from replicating and spreading. HPV causing cervical cancer can therefore be perceived as a failed evolutionary viral trait. Here we outline the occurrence and mechanisms of HPV integration and how this process results in oncogenic transformation.

Topics & Concepts

Cervical cancerCarcinogenesisCancerDiseaseBiologyTraitHuman papillomavirusGenotypeVaccinationHPV vaccinesVirologyMedicineHPV infectionImmunologyGeneticsInternal medicineGeneProgramming languageComputer scienceCervical Cancer and HPV ResearchAnimal Virus Infections StudiesHepatitis B Virus Studies
HPV integration and cervical cancer: a failed evolutionary viral trait | Litcius