HPV positive neuroendocrine cervical cancer cells are dependent on Myc but not E6/E7 viral oncogenes

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作者
Hang Yuan
Ewa Krawczyk
Jan Blancato
Christopher Albanese
Dan Zhou
Naidong Wang
Siddartha Paul
Faris Alkhilaiwi
Nancy Palechor-Ceron
Aleksandra Dakic
Shuang Fang
Sujata Choudhary
Tung-Wei Hou
Yun-Ling Zheng
Bassem R. Haddad
Yukari Usuda
Dan Hartmann
David Symer
Maura Gillison
Seema Agarwal
Danny Wangsa
Thomas Ried
Xuefeng Liu
Richard Schlegel
机构
[1] Georgetown University Medical School,Department of Pathology
[2] Georgetown University Medical School,Department of Oncology
[3] College of Pharmacy,undefined
[4] King Abulaziz University,undefined
[5] Human Cancer Genetics Program and Dept. of Molecular Virology,undefined
[6] Immunology and Medical Genetics,undefined
[7] Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center,undefined
[8] Dept. of Internal Medicine,undefined
[9] Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center,undefined
[10] Cancer Genomics Section,undefined
[11] Center for Cancer Research,undefined
[12] National Cancer Institute,undefined
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Using conditional cell reprogramming, we generated a stable cell culture of an extremely rare and aggressive neuroendocrine cervical cancer. The cultured cells contained HPV-16, formed colonies in soft agar and rapidly produced tumors in immunodeficient mice. The HPV-16 genome was integrated adjacent to the Myc gene, both of which were amplified 40-fold. Analysis of RNA transcripts detected fusion of the HPV/Myc genes, arising from apparent microhomologous recombination. Spectral karyotyping (SKY) and fluorescent-in-situ hybridization (FISH) demonstrated coordinate localization and translocation of the amplified Myc and HPV genes on chromosomes 8 and 21. Similar to the primary tumor, tumor cell cultures expressed very high levels of the Myc protein and, in contrast to all other HPV-positive cervical cancer cell lines, they harbored a gain-of-function mutation in p53 (R273C). Unexpectedly, viral oncogene knockdown had no effect on the growth of the cells, but it did inhibit the proliferation of a conventional HPV-16 positive cervical cancer cell line. Knockdown of Myc, but not the mutant p53, significantly inhibited tumor cell proliferation. On the basis of these data, we propose that the primary driver of transformation in this aggressive cervical cancer is not HPV oncogene expression but rather the overexpression of Myc.
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