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Human papillomavirus integration perspective in small cell cervical carcinoma.

Xiaoli WangWenlong JiaMengyao WangJihong LiuXianrong ZhouZhiqing LiangQinghua ZhangSixiang LongSuolang QuzhenXiangChun LiQiang TianXiong LiHaiying SunCaili ZhaoSilu MengRuoqi NingLing XiLin WangShasha ZhouJianwei ZhangLi WuYile ChenAijun LiuYaqi MaXia ZhaoXiaodong ChengQing ZhangXiaobing HanHuaxiong PanYuan ZhangLili CaoYiqin WangShaoping LingLihua CaoHui XingChang XuLong SuiShixuan WangJian-Feng ZhouBeihua KongXing XieGang ChenShuai Cheng LiDing MaShuang Li
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Small cell cervical carcinoma (SCCC) is a rare but aggressive malignancy. Here, we report human papillomavirus features and genomic landscape in SCCC via high-throughput HPV captured sequencing, whole-genome sequencing, whole-transcriptome sequencing, and OncoScan microarrays. HPV18 infections and integrations are commonly detected. Besides MYC family genes (37.9%), we identify SOX (8.4%), NR4A (6.3%), ANKRD (7.4%), and CEA (3.2%) family genes as HPV-integrated hotspots. We construct the genomic local haplotype around HPV-integrated sites, and find tandem duplications and amplified HPV long control regions (LCR). We propose three prominent HPV integration patterns: duplicating oncogenes (MYCN, MYC, and NR4A2), forming fusions (FGFR3-TACC3 and ANKRD12-NDUFV2), and activating genes (MYC) via the cis-regulations of viral LCRs. Moreover, focal CNA amplification peaks harbor canonical cancer genes including the HPV-integrated hotspots within MYC family, SOX2, and others. Our findings may provide potential molecular criteria for the accurate diagnosis and efficacious therapies for this lethal disease.
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