[HTML][HTML] Genomic profiling identifies common HPV-associated chromosomal alterations in squamous cell carcinomas of cervix and head and neck

SM Wilting, SJ Smeets, PJF Snijders… - BMC medical …, 2009 - Springer
SM Wilting, SJ Smeets, PJF Snijders, WN van Wieringen, MA van de Wiel, GA Meijer
BMC medical genomics, 2009Springer
Background It is well known that a persistent infection with high-risk human papillomavirus
(hrHPV) is causally involved in the development of squamous cell carcinomas of the uterine
cervix (CxSCCs) and a subset of SCCs of the head and neck (HNSCCs). The latter differ
from hrHPV-negative HNSCCs at the clinical and molecular level. Methods To determine
whether hrHPV-associated SCCs arising from different organs have specific chromosomal
alterations in common, we compared genome-wide chromosomal profiles of 10 CxSCCs (all …
Background
It is well known that a persistent infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) is causally involved in the development of squamous cell carcinomas of the uterine cervix (CxSCCs) and a subset of SCCs of the head and neck (HNSCCs). The latter differ from hrHPV-negative HNSCCs at the clinical and molecular level.
Methods
To determine whether hrHPV-associated SCCs arising from different organs have specific chromosomal alterations in common, we compared genome-wide chromosomal profiles of 10 CxSCCs (all hrHPV-positive) with 12 hrHPV-positive HNSCCs and 30 hrHPV-negative HNSCCs. Potential organ-specific alterations and alterations shared by SCCs in general were investigated as well.
Results
Unsupervised hierarchical clustering resulted in one mainly hrHPV-positive and one mainly hrHPV-negative cluster. Interestingly, loss at 13q and gain at 20q were frequent in HPV-positive carcinomas of both origins, but uncommon in hrHPV-negative HNSCCs, indicating that these alterations are associated with hrHPV-mediated carcinogenesis. Within the group of hrHPV-positive carcinomas, HNSCCs more frequently showed gains of multiple regions at 8q whereas CxSCCs more often showed loss at 17p. Finally, gains at 3q24-29 and losses at 11q22.3-25 were frequent (>50%) in all sample groups.
Conclusion
In this study hrHPV-specific, organ-specific, and pan-SCC chromosomal alterations were identified. The existence of hrHPV-specific alterations in SCCs of different anatomical origin, suggests that these alterations are crucial for hrHPV-mediated carcinogenesis.
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