Next Article 
Journal of Virology, November 2004, p. 11451-11460, Vol. 78, No. 21
0022-538X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.21.11451-11460.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Mechanisms of Human Papillomavirus-Induced Oncogenesis
Karl Münger,*
Amy Baldwin,
Kirsten M. Edwards,
Hiroyuki Hayakawa,
Christine L. Nguyen,
Michael Owens,
Miranda Grace, and
KyungWon Huh
Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

INTRODUCTION
Papillomaviruses are small nonenveloped viruses with 55-nm-diameter
icosahedral capsids that contain double-stranded DNA genomes
of approximately 8,000 bp. They are widely distributed throughout
the animal kingdom, specifically infect squamous epithelia,
and cause the generation of warts. An infectious etiology of
warts was long suspected and eventually proven in the 19th century.
One of the first recorded experimental wart transmission cases
in humans appears to have been accidental and was reported in
1845 by a certain Chandler, who "when removing a large acicular
condyloma with his instrument injured his assistance beneath
the thumbnail. On the injured place there appeared after a short
time a wart, which was repeatedly destroyed, but reappeared,
until the nail of the injured thumb was removed" (cited in reference
134). Ullmann also noted a similar accidental transmission of
laryngeal papillomas and performed self-inoculation experiments
with laryngeal papilloma extracts applied to scarified sites
on his forearm, and these experiments yielded warts after a
lengthy latency period of 9 months (
134). Similar inoculation
experiments had also been performed with extracts derived from
common hand warts (
23), and serial inoculation experiments with
human subjects were performed (
78).
Genital warts and cervical cancer were long regarded as manifestations of then-common venereal diseases such as syphilis and gonorrhea (75). This theory was contested in a rather ghastly paper published in 1917. Extracts of a penile condyloma that was harvested from a young medical student who did not exhibit other overt symptoms of venereal diseases were used to inoculate sites on the forearms of the author and his assistant as well as the genital mucosa of a "virgo intacta." After a period of 2.5 months, the unfortunate female subject developed genital condyloma, and flat warts appeared on the forearms of two male probands (139). These and other experiments led to the realization that genital warts represent distinct disease entities that are caused by a transmissible agent.
The concept that some warts have an inherent propensity for malignant progression was established from studies by Shope, Rous, and others who studied experimental transmission of warts that occur naturally in cottontail rabbits. These investigators discovered that lesions that formed in domestic rabbits after inoculation with cottontail rabbit wart extracts were particularly susceptible to malignant progression (116). Careful transmission studies demonstrated that such extracts caused the emergence of warts only in rabbits and not in other animals, thus illustrating the exquisite species specificity of papillomaviruses (117).
Harald zur Hausen's laboratory was the first to demonstrate that genital warts contain human papillomavirus (HPV) genomes (28, 53). Subsequent low-stringency hybridization experiments with HPV sequences isolated from genital warts performed in his laboratory led to the discovery of related HPV sequences in cervical cancer tissues (38).

HPV AND HUMAN DISEASE
Approximately 200 different HPVs have now been characterized,
and new types are regularly added to this list. These viruses
can be classified into mucosal and cutaneous HPVs. Within each
of these HPV groups, individual viruses are designated high
risk or low risk according to the propensity for malignant progression
of the lesions that they cause. Most HPVs are low risk and produce
localized benign warts that do not undergo malignant progression
even if left untreated. Among the cutaneous HPV types, HPV-5
and HPV-8 may be classified as high risk, as they are associated
with the development of epidermodysplasia verruciformis (EV),
an exceedingly rare skin condition that provided one of the
earliest indications that HPVs may contribute to human tumorigenesis
(
67,
104,
110). EV patients present with flat wart-like cutaneous
lesions in early childhood and frequently develop skin cancers
later in life, particularly in sun-exposed epithelial sites.
There is a clear genetic component to this disease, and the
increased incidence of EV-associated cancers in immune-suppressed
patients suggests that malignant progression is related to a
defect in immune surveillance (
3,
112). HPV-5- and HPV-8-related
HPVs have been detected in a large percentage of nonmelanoma
skin cancers, particularly those that develop in immune-suppressed
patients. It has been suggested that these viruses may also
contribute to psoriasis and skin tumors in immune-competent
individuals. There have been few molecular studies with EV-type
HPVs that yield insights regarding the molecular pathways by
which these viruses may contribute to skin carcinogenesis (reviewed
in references
89 and
109).
Low-risk mucosal HPVs such as HPV-6 and HPV-11 cause genital warts (condyloma accuminata), whereas the high-risk HPVs cause squamous intraepithelial lesions that can progress to invasive squamous cell carcinoma. The vast majority of human cervical cancers are associated with high-risk HPV infections. HPV-16 is by far the most prevalent mucosal high-risk HPV type, followed by HPV-18, HPV-31, and others (reviewed in reference 150). Approximately 20% of oral cancers, particularly oropharyngeal carcinomas in patients that lack the classical risk factors of tobacco and alcohol abuse, are also high-risk HPV positive (52). Other anogenital tract malignancies that are also frequently associated with high-risk HPV infections include penile and vulvovaginal cancers (reviewed in reference 26) as well as anal carcinomas, which frequently occur in individuals with human immunodeficiency virus-associated AIDS (reviewed in 82).
Within the family of mucosal HPVs, the low-risk/high-risk classification parallels the transforming potential of the respective viral genomes in cell culture and transgenic mouse models. Hence, much of the molecular research has focused on the analysis of the transforming activities of mucosal high-risk HPVs that are associated with cervical cancer. This review summarizes these insights.

GENOMIC ORGANIZATION AND LIFE CYCLE
Only one of the two strands of the circular papillomavirus DNA
genome is actively transcribed. The genome can be divided into
three major portions: a

4-kb early (E) region that encodes nonstructural
proteins, a

3-kb late (L) region that encodes the two capsid
proteins, and a

1-kb noncoding long control region (LCR) that
contains a variety of
cis elements, which regulate viral replication
and gene expression. E and L genes are numbered according to
size; the higher the number, the smaller the corresponding open
reading frame (Fig.
1A).
The papillomavirus life cycle is tightly linked to the differentiation
program of the infected epithelium. Papillomaviruses initially
infect basal epithelial cells, which constitute the only cell
layer in an epithelium that is actively dividing. The nature
of the HPV receptor(s) remains unclear, although integrin

4ß6
has been implicated (
45). Similarly, the processes that mediate
virus uptake, decapsidation, and nuclear import of the viral
genome remain largely unknown. The viral DNA is maintained at
a low copy number in the nuclei of infected host cells as they
undergo differentiation and move toward the surface of the epithelium.
In terminally differentiated cells, the virus replicates to
a high copy number, late genes are expressed, and progeny virus
is produced (reviewed in reference
123). HPVs are nonlytic viruses,
and progeny virus is shed into the environment as a cargo within
epithelial squamae. The HPV E4 protein associates with keratin
intermediate filaments, which affects the mechanical stability
of the keratin network and may facilitate the release of viral
particles (
30).
The papillomavirus E1 and E2 proteins each play important roles in viral genome replication. E2 is a DNA binding transcription factor that interacts with ACCN6GGT motifs in the viral LCR (reviewed in reference 90). High-risk HPV E2 proteins have the capacity to act as transcriptional activators (111), but they function as transcriptional repressors of viral gene expression in keratinocytes (11, 27). In addition to modulating viral gene expression, HPV E2 proteins associate with the viral DNA helicase E1. This interaction is necessary for efficient origin recognition and viral genome replication (21, 22). Papillomavirus E2 proteins also play important roles in viral genome segregation during cell division by tethering viral genomes to mitotic chromosomes (121). The association of E2 with mitotic chromosomes is mediated by interaction with the human bromodomain protein Brd4 (144).
Since HPVs do not encode other enzymes that are rate limiting for DNA replication, production of viral genomes is critically dependent on the host cellular DNA synthesis machinery. Papillomaviruses are replicated in differentiated squamous epithelial cells that are growth arrested and thus intrinsically incompetent to support genome synthesis. Hence, HPVs encode functions that create and/or maintain a replication-competent cellular milieu in infected differentiated keratinocytes. An additional important aspect of the papillomavirus life cycle is the establishment of long-term viral persistence in squamous epithelia, where cells constantly undergo differentiation and differentiated cells are shed. The specific strategies that high-risk HPVs have evolved to thwart these challenges directly contribute to their oncogenic potential.

HPV GENE EXPRESSION IN CERVICAL CANCERS
One of the key events of HPV-induced carcinogenesis is the integration
of the HPV genome into a host chromosome. HPV genome integration
often occurs near common fragile sites of the human genome (
131),
but there are no apparent hot spots for integration and no evidence
for insertional mutagenesis (
146). Integration follows a more
specific pattern with respect to the HPV genome. Expression
of the viral E6 and E7 genes is consistently maintained, whereas
other portions of the viral DNA are deleted or their expression
is disturbed (
6) (Fig.
1B). Loss of expression of the HPV E2
transcriptional repressor is significant, as it may result in
deregulated HPV E6 and E7 expression. There is also evidence
for increased HPV-16 E6/E7 mRNA stability after integration
(
71), and specific alterations of host cellular gene expression
have been detected upon HPV genome integration (
1). Cells that
express E6/E7 from integrated HPV sequences have a selective
growth advantage over cells with episomal HPV genomes (
70).
The concept that loss of E2 repressor function may be critical
for malignant progression is supported by experiments showing
that reexpression of E2 in cervical cancer cell lines causes
growth suppression (
126). These experiments clearly demonstrate
that continued E6/E7 expression in cervical cancers is necessary
for the maintenance of the transformed phenotype (
55,
140).
Integration of the viral genome into a host cell chromosome also leads to loss of E5 expression. In papillomaviruses that cause fibropapillomas, such as bovine papillomavirus type 1, the E5 open reading frame encodes the major transforming viral protein. E5 associates with intracellular membranes and transforms cells by activating receptor tyrosine kinases such as platelet-derived growth factor receptor ß through a ligand-independent mechanism (reviewed in reference 29). HPV E5 proteins may have similar activities (87), and disruption of E5 expression affects the life cycle of high-risk HPVs (46, 50). The fact that E5 expression is not generally detected in cervical cancers after viral genome integration demonstrates that E5 is not necessary for the maintenance of the transformed phenotype.

BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITIES OF HPV ONCOPROTEINS
The oncogenic activities of high-risk HPV E6 and E7 genes in
tissue culture and transgenic mouse model systems have been
documented extensively. Expression of high-risk HPV E6 and E7
genes in primary human keratinocytes effectively facilitates
their immortalization (
59,
96). When grown under conditions
that allow stratification and the formation of skin like structures,
high-risk HPV E6/E7 immortalized cells display histomorphological
hallmarks of high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions, well-established
precursors of cervical cancers (
91). At low passage numbers,
however, high-risk HPV immortalized cells are nontumorigenic.
They can undergo malignant progression after extended growth
in tissue culture or when additional oncogenes such as
ras or
fos are expressed (
37,
107). The development of cervical cancers
in a transgenic mouse model in which HPV-16 E6/E7 is expressed
in basal epithelial cells is dependent on long-term exposure
to low doses of estrogen (
4).
Similarly, progression of high-risk HPV-positive cervical lesions is often a slow process that occurs at a low frequency and requires the acquisition of host cellular mutations (reviewed in reference 150). The rate of spontaneous mutagenesis in normal human cells is exceedingly low, but the expression of high-risk HPV E6/E7 proteins dramatically augments genomic instability (142). Therefore, expression of the high-risk HPV E6/E7 genes not only is necessary for the induction of premalignant alterations but also directly contributes to malignant progression by subverting genomic stability (reviewed in reference 35).

CELLULAR TARGETS OF THE HIGH-RISK HPV E6 AND E7 ONCOPROTEINS
A small set of cellular signal transduction pathways are consistently
rendered dysfunctional in the majority of human solid tumors
(reviewed in reference
58). Efforts to enumerate the molecular
abnormalities in human tumors have more recently been complemented
by studies designed to define the minimally necessary series
of oncogenic steps necessary to generate fully transformed human
epithelial cell lines in vitro. Such experiments have revealed
that expression of simian virus 40 (SV40) large tumor antigen
(T), SV40 small tumor antigen (t), the catalytic subunit of
human telomerase (hTERT), and the H-
ras oncogene is minimally
required to fully transform primary human epithelial cells (reviewed
in reference
57). SV40 T functionally inactivates the p53 and
retinoblastoma (pRB) tumor suppressors, whereas SV40 t interacts
with and inhibits protein phosphatase 2A. The HPV E6 and E7
oncoproteins share functional similarities with SV40 T and inactivate
the p53 and pRB tumor suppressors, respectively. In addition,
HPV E6 can activate hTERT transcription. Hence, the expression
of high-risk HPV E6/E7 oncogenes provides a subset of the minimally
required carcinogenic hits for full transformation of primary
human epithelial cells.

INDUCTION OF ABERRANT PROLIFERATION BY HIGH-RISK HPV-16 E7 ONCOPROTEINS
HPV E7 proteins are low-molecular-weight proteins of approximately
100 amino acids that have no known intrinsic enzymatic activities.
Like other oncoproteins encoded by small DNA tumor viruses,
they associate with and modify the functions of cellular protein
complexes. The amino-terminal domain of HPV E7 has sequence
similarity to a small portion of conserved region 1 (CR1) and
to CR2 of adenovirus E1A (Fig.
2A). These sequences are also
conserved with SV40 T. The HPV E7 carboxyl terminus contains
two copies of a CXXC motif that are separated by a 29-amino-acid
spacer. This domain has been implicated in metal binding (
8)
and may function as a dimerization domain (
24,
93). Like adenovirus
(Ad) E1A and SV40 T antigen, the HPV E7 proteins interact with
the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein pRB and the related
"pocket proteins" p107 and p130 through a conserved LXCXE sequence
within CR2 sequences (
39,
40) (Fig.
2A). The pocket proteins
regulate the activities of the E2F family of transcription factors
that control multiple cell cycle transitions as well as other
cellular activities (reviewed in reference
17). The ability
of HPV E7, Ad E1A, and SV40 T antigen to associate with pRB
is critical for their capacity to generate and/or maintain a
host cellular milieu that is conducive to viral genome replication.
Consistent with this model, mutation of the LXCXE domain in
E7 impedes the HPV life cycle (
47,
127). High-risk HPV-derived
E7 proteins interact with pRB more efficiently than E7 proteins
encoded by low-risk mucosal HPVs (
49,
97), and mutations in
the LXCXE domain that affect pocket protein association are
transformation defective in different assay systems (reviewed
in reference
95). High-risk HPV E7 proteins have the unique
ability to destabilize the pocket proteins through a proteasome-dependent
mechanism (
10,
14,
73). In addition to the LXCXE domain, sequences
within the amino-terminal CR1 homology domain of high-risk HPV
E7 are necessary for the ability to destabilize pocket proteins.
High-risk HPV E7 proteins with mutations in the CR1 homology
domain are also transformation deficient. Hence, the ability
of high-risk E7 proteins to destabilize pocket proteins is critical
for cellular transformation (
54,
61,
73) (Fig.
2A). In addition
to pRB binding and degradation, E7 has other cellular targets
that are relevant to cellular transformation. HPV E7 can override
the growth-inhibitory activities of cyclin-dependent kinase
inhibitors, including p21
CIP1 (
48,
72) and p27
KIP1 (
145). Since
these proteins are critical regulators of cell cycle arrest
during keratinocyte differentiation (
94), their inhibition by
E7 may also contribute to the maintenance of a replication-competent
cellular milieu in differentiated host epithelial cells (
20).
A carboxyl-terminal E7 domain that does not contribute to pRB
binding and/or degradation is necessary for the ability of E7
to override p21
CIP1-mediated growth arrest (
60). Additional
E7-interacting proteins, including transcription factors, cell
cycle regulators, and metabolic enzymes, have been isolated
by various methods, and many of these candidates appear to associate
with carboxyl-terminal E7 sequences (reviewed in reference
95).
The biological relevance of many of these interactions, however,
remains to be determined. The carboxyl-terminal HPV E7 domain
contributes to association with chromatin-modifying enzymes,
particularly histone deacetylases and histone acetyl transferases
(
15). E7 has also been reported to interact with the transcriptional
coactivators p300, CBP, and pCAF (
5,
12,
64). Similar to the
case for the amino-terminal pRB binding site, the integrity
of the carboxyl-terminal E7 sequences that have been implicated
in histone deacetylase binding are necessary for the viral life
cycle (
88). Hence, these interactions may contribute to transforming
activities of high-risk HPV E7 proteins (Fig.
2A).

ELIMINATION OF TROPHIC SENTINEL SIGNALING BY HIGH-RISK HPV E6 ONCOPROTEINS
The HPV E6 proteins are small proteins of approximately 150
amino acids and contain two domains consisting of paired CXXC
motifs that are each related to the E7 carboxyl terminus (
25).
Induction of aberrant cellular and/or viral DNA synthesis in
differentiated keratinocytes that presumably lack environmental
mitogen stimulation results in conflicting growth signals. This
situation triggers a cellular defense mechanism, the "trophic
sentinel response" that eliminates such deviant cells from the
proliferative pool through cell type-specific abortive processes,
including cell death, differentiation, and senescence (reviewed
in reference
43) (Fig.
3). This was originally discovered in
transgenic mouse models in which E7 expression caused aberrant
proliferation and differentiation, which resulted in cell death
(
63,
101,
102). Similar to what has been reported for adenovirus
E1A (
113) and c-
myc (
44), HPV-16 E7-expressing cells are predisposed
to cell death when their culture medium is deprived of growth
factors (
41,
74). This process is p53 dependent, even though
many p53-responsive apoptosis regulators are not induced, and
cell death appears to be at least in part caspase independent
(
41,
76).
High-risk HPV E6 proteins eliminate the trophic sentinel response
triggered by E7 expression (
74) through inactivation of p53.
This process is essential for the life cycle of high-risk HPVs
(
103). High-risk HPV proteins E6 do not directly associate with
p53 but form a complex with the cellular E6-AP protein, which
is essential for p53 interaction (
66). E6-AP is the founding
member of the homology to E6 C terminus (HECT) family of E3
ubiquitin ligases (
65). E6-AP does not interact with p53 in
the absence of E6, and its normal substrates are unknown (
9,
124). High-risk E6 proteins retarget E6-AP to induce ubiquitination
and rapid proteasomal degradation of p53 (
119). HPV-16 E6 proteins
may also interact with additional cellular factors that are
important for the transcriptional activity of p53, including
p300 (
105,
147) and the transcriptional coactivator ADA3 (
84).
High-risk HPV E6 proteins also have p53-independent transforming activities. These HPV E6 proteins contain a carboxyl-terminal PDZ binding domain (80, 86) (Fig. 2B). PDZ domain proteins act as molecular organizing centers for many cellular signal transduction pathways (reviewed in reference 136). The ability of adenovirus type 9 to induce mammary tumors in rats is linked to the E4 ORF1 protein (68, 69) and its capacity to form complexes with PDZ proteins (86). The high-risk HPV E6 proteins have a marked specificity for particular PDZ domains (129), but the biologically relevant PDZ targets for E6 remain to be determined. The ability of high-risk HPV E6 proteins to associate with PDZ host proteins is relevant to cellular transformation. This relevance has been best illustrated in a transgenic mouse model in which the ability of HPV-16 E6 to induce skin hyperplasias (85) is dependent on the integrity of the carboxyl-terminal PDZ binding domain (98).
A considerable number of additional cellular proteins have been reported to associate with E6. These include the EF-hand calcium-binding protein E6-BP (reticulocalbin 2) (19), the interferon regulatory factor IRF-3 (115), and the focal adhesion protein paxillin (132, 135). Hyperactivity of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) has been detected in cervical cancer and HPV immortalized epithelial cell lines, but the mechanism is unclear (92). Because these and other potential E6 cellular target proteins share a conserved
-helical interaction site for E6 association (18, 42, 133, 135) (Fig. 2B), it has been difficult to determine the relevance of these individual interactions to the biological activities of high-risk HPV E6 proteins.

INDUCTION OF TELOMERASE ACTIVITY BY HIGH-RISK HPV E6 PROTEINS
Each round of DNA replication leads to erosion of the chromosomal
telomeric termini. Telomere shortening represents a cell-autonomous
mechanism that restricts the proliferative capacity of normal
somatic cells. Certain cell types that must undergo a large
number of cell divisions, such as stem cells, express telomerase,
a ribonucleoprotein that prevents telomere erosion. Ectopic
expression of the catalytic telomerase subunit, hTERT, in primary
human cells causes life span extension and facilitates immortalization.
The majority of human tumor cells are telomerase positive, suggesting
that aberrant telomerase activity may be critical for human
tumorigenesis. Ectopic hTERT expression also represents one
of the obligatory components for the generation of human tumor-like
cells in vitro (reviewed in reference
13). In combination with
E7, high-risk HPV E6 proteins contribute to immortalization
of primary human epithelial cells through the induction of telomerase
activity (
79,
83). High-risk E6 proteins induce hTERT expression
at a transcriptional level (
137). The minimal E6 responsive
hTERT promoter fragment contains c-
myc-responsive E-boxes that
contribute to E6-mediated transcriptional activation, but E6
does not markedly affect c-
myc expression or the composition
of myc transcription factor complexes (
51,
99,
138). There is
evidence, however, that E6 directly interacts with c-
myc and
that a c-
myc/E6 complex activates hTERT expression (
138).

HPV ONCOPROTEINS AND GENOMIC INSTABILITY
As outlined in the previous sections, the continued combined
expression of high-risk HPV E6 and E7 proteins in cervical cancers
causes inactivation of the pRB and p53 tumor suppressor pathways
and induces telomerase activity. These signal transduction pathways
are disrupted in the majority of human solid tumors (reviewed
in reference
58), but they constitute only a subset of the oncogenic
hits that are minimally required to generate fully transformed
human cells in vitro (reviewed in reference
57). Clearly, additional
oncogenic events are necessary in E6/E7 expressing cells to
yield full transformation in vivo and in vitro. Consistent with
this notion, cervical carcinomas contain chromosomal abnormalities
(reviewed in reference
149). Specific gains of chromosome 3q
occur at the transition from high-risk-HPV-associated severe
dysplasia to invasive carcinoma (
56,
62).
Human carcinogenesis has been characterized as a disease of genomic instability (81), and the majority of human solid tumors display evidence of chromosomal aberrations, most notably aneuploidy. Fully transformed human cells generated in vitro retain stability of their genomes (148). Genomic instability therefore does not necessarily arise as a generic manifestation of oncogenic transformation but rather represents a characteristic of tumor cells that enables them to acquire genetic alterations that are necessary for survival and clonal expansion within the rapidly changing microenvironment of an emerging neoplasm (reviewed in reference 16). Hallmarks of genomic instability have even been noted in early premalignant high-risk-HPV-associated lesions. In particular, the presence of tripolar mitotic figures has served as a hallmark to distinguish high-risk-HPV-positive lesions (143).
High-risk HPV E6 and E7 oncoproteins can each independently induce genomic instability in normal human cells (142). They cooperate to generate mitotic defects and aneuploidy through the induction of centrosome abnormalities (Fig. 4) in normal human epithelial cells, and the characteristic multipolar mitoses in cervical lesions are caused by centrosome abnormalities (33). In contrast, low-risk HPV E6/E7 proteins are not capable of inducing centrosome abnormalities. Centrosome abnormalities and associated mitotic defects are apparent in cells that, similar to low-grade HPV-associated lesions, express episomal HPV-16 at a low copy number (32), and their incidence increases in cells with integrated HPV (108). Centrosome abnormalities have also been detected in cervical (7, 114) and skin lesions that arise in HPV-16 E6- and/or E7-expressing transgenic mice (118).
In many tumors, centrosome abnormalities emerge as a consequence
of cytokinesis and/or cell division defects, thus occurring
mostly in cells that have also accumulated nuclear abnormalities
(reviewed in reference
122). In stark contrast, however, HPV
E7 expression induces primary centrosome and centriole duplication
errors in normal diploid cells (
31). The detailed molecular
mechanisms of this activity of E7 remain to be determined. This
activity is at least in part independent of the ability to target
pRB family members, since the expression of HPV-16 E7 causes
an increased incidence of centrosome abnormalities in mouse
embryo fibroblasts that lack pRB, p107, and p130 expression
(
34). Thus, HPV-16 E7 may act as a mitotic mutator which by
increasing the likelihood of mitotic errors during each round
of cell division provides the necessary genomic plasticity for
the acquisition of additional cellular mutations that contribute
to malignant progression (reviewed in reference
35). HPV oncoprotein-expressing
cells also exhibit centrosome-independent manifestations of
genomic instability. These manifestations include anaphase bridges
that may be caused by double-strand DNA breaks as well as lagging
chromosomal material (
36). HPV-16 expressing cells have a higher
propensity for integration of plasmid DNA (
77). The observed
incidence of double-strand DNA breaks in HPV-16 E6/E7-expressing
cells may provide for a mechanistic rationalization of this
observation and may facilitate HPV genome integration that often
accompanies malignant progression. In addition, high-risk HPV
E6 and E7 proteins eliminate multiple mitotic checkpoints and/or
the tetraploidy checkpoint that normally blocks tetraploid cells
from reentering the cell division cycle (
128,
130). Genomic
analyses have offered additional evidence for the dysregulation
of mitotic pathways in cervical cancer and high-risk-HPV-expressing
cell lines (
106,
125).

CONCLUDING REMARKS
The transforming activities of high-risk HPVs represent a consequence
of a viral replication strategy that is driven by the necessity
to replicate viral genomes in suprabasal, normally growth-arrested
differentiated epithelial cells and to establish long-term maintenance
in a tissue in which individual cells are rapidly turned over
and shed. Carcinogenic progression of high-risk-HPV-infected
cells is an abortive, terminal event, since most cancer cells
contain integrated HPV genomes and do produce viral progeny.
If the integration of high-risk HPV genomes indeed represents
a consequence of HPV E6/E7-induced genomic instability, it appears
that such a replication strategy might put high-risk HPVs at
an evolutionary disadvantage compared to the low-risk HPVs that
infect the anogenital tract mucosa. Low-risk HPVs effectively
induce epithelial hyperplasia and produce copious amounts of
progeny virus. Low-risk HPV E6 and E7 proteins critically contribute
to viral life cycle (
100), but they have a substantially lower
transforming activity and do not induce genomic instability.
Low-risk HPV E7 proteins bind to pRB at a decreased efficiency
(
49,
97) and do not induce pRB destabilization (
54). Low-risk
HPV E6 proteins do not efficiently interact with p53 (
141) and
are incompetent for p53 degradation (
120). They lack carboxyl-terminal
PDZ binding domains (
80,
86) and do not induce telomerase activity
(
83). Consequently, it is tempting to speculate that life cycles
of mucosal high-risk and low-risk HPVs differ fundamentally.
High-risk HPVs can frequently persist in an infected host cell
at a low copy number for decades, often without causing clinically
overt lesions. This is remarkable given that squamous epithelial
cells are turned over very rapidly. A relatively small number
of basal epithelial cells have characteristics of stem cells
and constantly produce differentiation-competent squamous epithelial
cells to maintain the integrity of the epithelium throughout
the life of the organism (reviewed in reference
2). One might
envision a scenario in which high-risk HPVs have evolved to
be able to maintain their infected host cell in a stem cell-like
state in order to establish a persistent infection. The high-risk
HPV-specific biological activities of E6 and E7 may reflect
this strategy. Low-risk HPVs may have evolved a life cycle that
is optimized to rapidly produce copious amounts of progeny virus
and readily form large productive lesions to maximize transmission
of the virus to a new host. Such a model may predict that different
HPVs may infect distinct target cells and that there may be
differences in the persistence of viral genomes in infected
host cells.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Peter Howley for his critical comments on the manuscript.
The present work on HPV transformation in our laboratory is supported by Public Health Service grants CA81135, CA66980, and DE015302 to K.M. H.H. is supported through a grant from CYTYC Corporation, and C.L.N. is supported by NIH training grant T32 CA09031.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, 77 Ave. Louis Pasteur, NRB 0958C, Boston, MA 02115-5727. Phone: (617) 432-2878. Fax: (617) 432-0426. E-mail:
karl_munger{at}hms.harvard.edu.


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Journal of Virology, November 2004, p. 11451-11460, Vol. 78, No. 21
0022-538X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.21.11451-11460.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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