Inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk HPV DNA genomes deficient in expression of E6.

The human papillomavirus DNA genome undergoes three distinct stages of replication: establishment, maintenance and amplification. We show that the HPV16 E6 protein is required for the maintenance of the HPV16 DNA genome as an extrachromosomal, nuclear plasmid in its natural host cell, the human kera...

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Main Authors: Laurel D Lorenz, Jessenia Rivera Cardona, Paul F Lambert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-10-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24204267/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-783960713028493fa828ecde78f8218b2021-04-21T17:49:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742013-10-01910e100371710.1371/journal.ppat.1003717Inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk HPV DNA genomes deficient in expression of E6.Laurel D LorenzJessenia Rivera CardonaPaul F LambertThe human papillomavirus DNA genome undergoes three distinct stages of replication: establishment, maintenance and amplification. We show that the HPV16 E6 protein is required for the maintenance of the HPV16 DNA genome as an extrachromosomal, nuclear plasmid in its natural host cell, the human keratinocyte. Based upon mutational analyses, inactivation of p53 by E6, but not necessarily E6-mediated degradation of p53, was found to correlate with the ability of E6 to support maintenance of the HPV16 genome as a nuclear plasmid. Inactivation of p53 with dominant negative p53 rescued the ability of HPV16 E6STOP and E6SAT mutant genomes to replicate as extrachromosomal genomes, though not to the same degree as observed for the HPV16 E6 wild-type (WT) genome. Inactivation of p53 also rescued the ability of HPV18 and HPV31 E6-deficient genomes to be maintained at copy numbers comparable to that of HPV18 and HPV31 E6WT genomes at early passages, though upon further passaging copy numbers for the HPV18 and 31 E6-deficient genomes lessened compared to that of the WT genomes. We conclude that inactivation of p53 is necessary for maintenance of HPV16 and for HPV18 and 31 to replicate at WT copy number, but that additional functions of E6 independent of inactivating p53 must also contribute to the maintenance of these genomes. Together these results suggest that re-activation of p53 may be a possible means for eradicating extrachromosomal HPV16, 18 or 31 genomes in the context of persistent infections.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24204267/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laurel D Lorenz
Jessenia Rivera Cardona
Paul F Lambert
spellingShingle Laurel D Lorenz
Jessenia Rivera Cardona
Paul F Lambert
Inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk HPV DNA genomes deficient in expression of E6.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Laurel D Lorenz
Jessenia Rivera Cardona
Paul F Lambert
author_sort Laurel D Lorenz
title Inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk HPV DNA genomes deficient in expression of E6.
title_short Inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk HPV DNA genomes deficient in expression of E6.
title_full Inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk HPV DNA genomes deficient in expression of E6.
title_fullStr Inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk HPV DNA genomes deficient in expression of E6.
title_full_unstemmed Inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk HPV DNA genomes deficient in expression of E6.
title_sort inactivation of p53 rescues the maintenance of high risk hpv dna genomes deficient in expression of e6.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2013-10-01
description The human papillomavirus DNA genome undergoes three distinct stages of replication: establishment, maintenance and amplification. We show that the HPV16 E6 protein is required for the maintenance of the HPV16 DNA genome as an extrachromosomal, nuclear plasmid in its natural host cell, the human keratinocyte. Based upon mutational analyses, inactivation of p53 by E6, but not necessarily E6-mediated degradation of p53, was found to correlate with the ability of E6 to support maintenance of the HPV16 genome as a nuclear plasmid. Inactivation of p53 with dominant negative p53 rescued the ability of HPV16 E6STOP and E6SAT mutant genomes to replicate as extrachromosomal genomes, though not to the same degree as observed for the HPV16 E6 wild-type (WT) genome. Inactivation of p53 also rescued the ability of HPV18 and HPV31 E6-deficient genomes to be maintained at copy numbers comparable to that of HPV18 and HPV31 E6WT genomes at early passages, though upon further passaging copy numbers for the HPV18 and 31 E6-deficient genomes lessened compared to that of the WT genomes. We conclude that inactivation of p53 is necessary for maintenance of HPV16 and for HPV18 and 31 to replicate at WT copy number, but that additional functions of E6 independent of inactivating p53 must also contribute to the maintenance of these genomes. Together these results suggest that re-activation of p53 may be a possible means for eradicating extrachromosomal HPV16, 18 or 31 genomes in the context of persistent infections.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24204267/?tool=EBI
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