Investigating the Sequence Variation in E2-Binding Domain of HPV16 and Biological Function Evaluation in Tunisian Cervical Cancers

Kahla, Saloua and Kochbati, Lotfi and Hammami, Samia and Chanoufi, Mohamed Badis and Maalej, Mongi and Oueslati, Ridha (2021) Investigating the Sequence Variation in E2-Binding Domain of HPV16 and Biological Function Evaluation in Tunisian Cervical Cancers. In: Highlights on Medicine and Medical Research Vol. 14. B P International, pp. 85-98. ISBN 978-93-91215-63-7

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract

Infection with hr-HPV (High-risk types of the human papillomaviruses) is a necessary but not sufficient cause of invasive cervical cancer, with additional virus-host interactions needed for cancer to develop. HPV16 E2 variants have different effects on the transcriptional activity of the LCR. In this study, we examined the nucleotide and amino acid sequence variation within the HPV16 E2 gene and to correlate with disease progression. E2 gene disruption was detected by PCR amplification of the entire E2 gene using a single set of primers. Nucleotide variations were analyzed by bidirectional sequencing. mRNA expression patterns of E6 and E7 gene transcripts were evaluated by a reverse transcriptase-PCR method (RT-PCR). The detection of intact E2 genes was significantly higher among controls than cases (81.8% versus 37.5%, resp., < 0.05). Among the E subgroup, variation at position 3684 C>A results in the amino acid substitution T310K and was more common among the E2 undisrupted cases (7/9; 77.7%), compared to controls (2/9; 22.2%). In addition, specific sequence variations identified in the E2 ORF at positions 3684 C>A were associated with increased viral oncogenes E6-E7 production. Besides HPV16 E2 disruption, the 3684 C>A variation within undisrupted E2 genes could be involved in an alternative mechanism for deregulating the expression of the HPV16 E6 and E7 oncogenes and appears to be a major factor contributing to the development of cervical cancer in Tunisian women. The study would provide valuable information, as the level of the HPV16 E6-E7 transcripts and the detection of E2 mutations, with DNA physical state detection, could serve as an additional mechanism for evaluating risk for the development of cervical carcinoma.

Item Type: Book Section
Subjects: European Repository > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 21 Dec 2023 04:54
Last Modified: 21 Dec 2023 04:54
URI: http://go7publish.com/id/eprint/3329

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item