Canham Maurice, Charsou Chara, Stewart June, Moncur Sharon, Hoodless Laura, Bhatia Ramya, Cong Duanduan, Cubie Heather, Busby-Earle Camille, Williams Alistair, McLoughlin Victoria, Campbell John D M, Cuschieri Kate, Howie Sarah
Human Papillomavirus Group, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom; Medical Research Council Centre for Regenerative Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Medical Research Council Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 Dec 22;9(12):e115379. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0115379. eCollection 2014.
High risk (oncogenic) human papillomavirus (HPV) infection causes cervical cancer. Infections are common but most clear naturally. Persistent infection can progress to cancer. Pre-neoplastic disease (cervical intraepithelial neoplasia/CIN) is classified by histology (CIN1-3) according to severity. Cervical abnormalities are screened for by cytology and/or detection of high risk HPV but both methods are imperfect for prediction of which women need treatment. There is a need to understand the host virus interactions that lead to different disease outcomes and to develop biomarker tests for accurate triage of infected women. As cancer is increasingly presumed to develop from proliferative, tumour initiating, cancer stem cells (CSCs), and as other oncogenic viruses induce stem cell associated gene expression, we evaluated whether presence of mRNA (detected by qRT-PCR) or proteins (detected by flow cytometry and antibody based proteomic microarray) from stem cell associated genes and/or increased cell proliferation (detected by flow cytometry) could be detected in well-characterised, routinely collected cervical samples from high risk HPV+ve women. Both cytology and histology results were available for most samples with moderate to high grade abnormality. We found that stem cell associated proteins including human chorionic gonadotropin, the oncogene TP63 and the transcription factor SOX2 were upregulated in samples from women with CIN3 and that the stem cell related, cell surface, protein podocalyxin was detectable on cells in samples from a subset of women with CIN3. SOX2, TP63 and human gonadotrophin mRNAs were upregulated in high grade disease. Immunohistochemistry showed that SOX2 and TP63 proteins clearly delineated tumour cells in invasive squamous cervical cancer. Samples from women with CIN3 showed increased proliferating cells. We believe that these markers may be of use to develop triage tests for women with high grade cervical abnormality to distinguish those who may progress to cancer from those who may be treated more conservatively.
高危(致癌性)人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)感染可导致宫颈癌。感染很常见,但大多数会自然清除。持续感染可能会发展为癌症。癌前疾病(宫颈上皮内瘤变/CIN)根据严重程度通过组织学分类为CIN1-3。通过细胞学检查和/或检测高危HPV来筛查宫颈异常情况,但这两种方法在预测哪些女性需要治疗方面都存在不足。有必要了解导致不同疾病结果的宿主与病毒之间的相互作用,并开发生物标志物检测方法,以便对感染女性进行准确分类。由于越来越多的人认为癌症是由增殖性、肿瘤起始性癌症干细胞(CSCs)发展而来,并且其他致癌病毒会诱导与干细胞相关的基因表达,因此我们评估了在特征明确、常规收集的高危HPV阳性女性宫颈样本中,是否能够检测到与干细胞相关基因的mRNA(通过定量逆转录聚合酶链反应检测)或蛋白质(通过流式细胞术和基于抗体的蛋白质组微阵列检测),以及是否能检测到细胞增殖增加(通过流式细胞术检测)。大多数中度至高度异常的样本都有细胞学和组织学结果。我们发现,在CIN3女性的样本中,包括人绒毛膜促性腺激素、癌基因TP63和转录因子SOX2在内的与干细胞相关的蛋白质上调,并且在一部分CIN3女性样本的细胞上可检测到与干细胞相关的细胞表面蛋白足突融合蛋白。在高级别疾病中,SOX2、TP63和人促性腺激素的mRNA上调。免疫组织化学显示,SOX2和TP63蛋白在浸润性宫颈鳞状细胞癌中清晰地勾勒出肿瘤细胞。CIN3女性的样本显示增殖细胞增加。我们认为,这些标志物可能有助于开发针对高级别宫颈异常女性的分类检测方法,以区分那些可能发展为癌症的女性和那些可能需要更保守治疗的女性。