This is a preprint.
Genomic structures and regulation patterns at HPV integration sites in cervical cancer
- PMID: 37961641
- PMCID: PMC10635144
- DOI: 10.1101/2023.11.04.564800
Genomic structures and regulation patterns at HPV integration sites in cervical cancer
Update in
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Rearrangements of viral and human genomes at human papillomavirus integration events and their allele-specific impacts on cancer genome regulation.Genome Res. 2025 Apr 14;35(4):653-670. doi: 10.1101/gr.279041.124. Genome Res. 2025. PMID: 39638560 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Human papillomavirus (HPV) integration has been implicated in transforming HPV infection into cancer, but its genomic consequences have been difficult to study using short-read technologies. To resolve the dysregulation associated with HPV integration, we performed long-read sequencing on 63 cervical cancer genomes. We identified six categories of integration events based on HPV-human genomic structures. Of all HPV integrants, defined as two HPV-human breakpoints bridged by an HPV sequence, 24% contained variable copies of HPV between the breakpoints, a phenomenon we termed heterologous integration. Analysis of DNA methylation within and in proximity to the HPV genome at individual integration events revealed relationships between methylation status of the integrant and its orientation and structure. Dysregulation of the human epigenome and neighboring gene expression in cis with the HPV-integrated allele was observed over megabase-ranges of the genome. By elucidating the structural, epigenetic, and allele-specific impacts of HPV integration, we provide insight into the role of integrated HPV in cervical cancer.
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