HPV73 a nonvaccine type causes cervical cancer
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International Journal of Cancer
Abstract
HPV73 is classified as possibly oncogenic. It is neither routinely evaluated in HPV screening, nor covered by any of the
prophylactic vaccines. We sought to investigate the carcinogenic characteristics of HPV73. Molecular studies were performed
on eight cervix cancer biopsy specimens containing HPV73 from a cross-sectional cancer cohort of 590 women referred to the
National Cancer Institute in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Transcriptional activity of HPV73 was evaluated by detection of spliced
transcripts of E6/E6* and E1^E4 in cDNA created from RNA isolated from fresh tissue. Disruption of viral E1 and E2 genes in
the tumor DNA was assessed by overlapping PCR amplification. Evaluation of viral integration was performed using a
customized capture panel and next-generation sequencing, and an in-house bioinformatic pipeline. HPV73 E6/E6* transcripts
were found in 7/7 specimens with available RNA, and three also had HPV73 E1^E4 transcripts. Disruption of E1 and E2 genes
was observed in 4/8 specimens. Integration of HPV73 sequences into the cancer cell genomes was identified in all cervix
cancer tissues. These results provide evidence that HPV73 is an oncogenic virus that can cause invasive cervix cancer. With
current molecular screening and HPV vaccination, not all cervix cancers will be prevented.