Smith-McCune K, Zhu Y H, Hanahan D, Arbeit J
Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, University of California at San Francisco, 94143, USA.
Cancer Res. 1997 Apr 1;57(7):1294-300.
Infection of the human cervix with certain papillomavirus subtypes is associated with the development of neoplastic squamous lesions that can progress to overt cervical malignancies. Recently, multistage squamous carcinogenesis has been achieved in K14-HPV16 transgenic mice, wherein expression of the human papillomavirus (HPV) type 16 early genes is targeted to basal squamous epithelial cells by regulatory elements of the human keratin-14 (K14) promoter. Immunostaining of the endothelial marker vWf revealed a parallel upregulation of angiogenesis during the early neoplastic stages in both human cervix and the epidermis of K14-HPV16 transgenic mice. Moreover, high-grade premalignant lesions and cancers in humans and transgenic mice were characterized by an additional increment in the number of new capillaries and close apposition of the microvasculature to the overlying neoplastic epithelium. Expression of the potent angiogenic factor VEGF was progressively up-regulated during carcinogenesis in both species, correlating with the increased density and altered distribution of the microvasculature. Thus, angiogenesis occurs during the premalignant stages of squamous carcinogenesis in both human cervical disease and a relevant transgenic model and may be controlled by similar molecular mechanisms in both species. These results validate the use of the transgenic model to elucidate the role of angiogenesis during HPV-associated neoplastic progression.
人体子宫颈感染某些乳头瘤病毒亚型与肿瘤性鳞状病变的发生有关,这些病变可发展为明显的子宫颈恶性肿瘤。最近,在K14-HPV16转基因小鼠中实现了多阶段鳞状细胞癌发生,其中人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)16型早期基因的表达通过人角蛋白-14(K14)启动子的调控元件靶向基底鳞状上皮细胞。内皮标志物vWf的免疫染色显示,在人子宫颈和K14-HPV16转基因小鼠的表皮中,肿瘤形成早期阶段血管生成同时上调。此外,人类和转基因小鼠的高级别癌前病变和癌症的特征是新毛细血管数量进一步增加,且微血管与覆盖其上的肿瘤上皮紧密相邻。在两种物种的癌变过程中,强效血管生成因子VEGF的表达逐渐上调,这与微血管密度增加和分布改变相关。因此,血管生成发生在人类子宫颈疾病和相关转基因模型的鳞状细胞癌前阶段,并且在两种物种中可能受相似分子机制控制。这些结果验证了使用转基因模型来阐明血管生成在HPV相关肿瘤进展中的作用。