Back to Search Start Over

Detection of hypermutated human papillomavirus type 16 genome by Next-Generation Sequencing

Authors :
Guangyan Liu
Miki Koura
Kousho Wakae
Tomoaki Nishiyama
Shuji Shigenobu
Satoru Kyo
Masamichi Muramatsu
Satoru Aoyama
Iwao Kukimoto
Mitsuhiro Nakamura
Tomokazu Yoshizaki
Katsushi Yamaguchi
Naoya Sakamoto
Kouichi Kitamura
Zhe Wang
Mieko Imayasu
Satoru Kondo
Hiroshi Fujiwara
Ahasan Md. Monjurul
Source :
Virology. 485
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) is a major cause of cervical cancer. We previously demonstrated that C-to-T and G-to-A hypermutations accumulated in the HPV16 genome by APOBEC3 expression in vitro. To investigate in vivo characteristics of hypermutation, differential DNA denaturation-PCR (3D-PCR) was performed using three clinical specimens obtained from HPV16-positive cervical dysplasia, and detected hypermutation from two out of three specimens. One sample accumulating hypermutations in both E2 and the long control region (LCR) was further subjected to Next-Generation Sequencing, revealing that hypermutations spread across the LCR and all early genes. Notably, hypermutation was more frequently observed in the LCR, which contains a viral replication origin and the early promoter. APOBEC3 expressed abundantly in an HPV16-positive cervix, suggesting that single-stranded DNA exposed during viral replication and transcription may be efficient targets for deamination. The results further strengthen a role of APOBEC3 in introducing HPV16 hypermutation in vivo.

Details

ISSN :
10960341
Volume :
485
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c5080929ccc27729a5e44e19fde81fe