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      Chronic oxidative stress increases the integration frequency of foreign DNA and human papillomavirus 16 in human keratinocytes.

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          Abstract

          Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer, and the fourth most common cause of cancer death in women worldwide. Nearly all of these cases are caused by high-risk HPVs (HR HPVs), of which HPV16 is the most prevalent type. In most cervical cancer specimens, HR HPVs are found integrated into the human genome, indicating that integration is a key event in cervical tumor development. An understanding of the mechanisms that promote integration may therefore represent a unique opportunity to intercept carcinogenesis. To begin identifying these mechanisms, we tested the hypothesis that chronic oxidative stress (OS) induced by virus- and environmentallymediated factors can induce DNA damage, and thereby increase the frequency with which HPV integrates into the host genome. We found that virus-mediated factors are likely involved, as expression of E6*, a splice isoform of HPV16 E6, increased the levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), caused oxidative DNA damage, and increased the frequency of plasmid DNA integration as assessed by colony formation assays. To assess the influence of environmentally induced chronic OS, we used L-Buthionine-sulfoximine (BSO) to lower the level of the intracellular antioxidant glutathione. Similar to our observations with E6*, glutathione depletion by BSO also increased ROS levels, caused oxidative DNA damage and increased the integration frequency of plasmid DNA. Finally, under conditions of chronic OS, we were able to induce and characterize a few independent events in which episomal HPV16 integrated into the host genome of cervical keratinocytes. Our results support a chain of events leading from induction of oxidative stress, to DNA damage, to viral integration, and ultimately to carcinogenesis.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am J Cancer Res
          American journal of cancer research
          2156-6976
          2156-6976
          2016
          : 6
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Basic Science, Loma Linda University School of Medicine Loma Linda, CA, USA.
          Article
          4859882
          27186429
          0bfb148e-2a53-49fa-9435-05eb884d04db
          History

          reactive oxygen species (ROS),Cervical cancer,E6*,carcinogenesis,high-risk HPVs (HR HPVs),integration,oxidative stress (OS)

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