Infectious Agents and Cancer (Nov 2023)

Evaluation of human papillomavirus DNA in colorectal cancer and adjacent mucosal tissue samples

  • Luisa Galati,
  • Purnima Gupta,
  • Antonio Tufaro,
  • Mariarosaria Marinaro,
  • Concetta Saponaro,
  • David Israel Escobar Marcillo,
  • Donato Loisi,
  • Rajdip Sen,
  • Alexis Robitaille,
  • Rosario N. Brancaccio,
  • Cyrille Cuenin,
  • Sandrine McKay-Chopin,
  • Angelo Virgilio Paradiso,
  • Václav Liška,
  • Pavel Souček,
  • Francesco Alfredo Zito,
  • David J. Hughes,
  • Massimo Tommasino,
  • Tarik Gheit

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13027-023-00552-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Although the role of viral agents, such as human papillomavirus (e.g. HPV16, HPV18) in colorectal cancer (CRC) has been previously investigated, results remain inconclusive. Methods To further evaluate the involvement of oncogenic HPV types in CRC, 40 frozen neoplastic and 40 adjacent colonic tissues collected from Italian patients were analyzed by Luminex-based assays that detect a broad spectrum of HPV types, i.e. Alpha (n = 21), Beta (n = 46) and Gamma HPVs (n = 52). In addition, 125 frozen CRC samples and 70 surrounding mucosal tissues were collected from Czech patients and analyzed by broad spectrum PCR protocols: (i) FAP59/64, (ii) FAPM1 and (iii) CUT combined with Next Generation Sequencing (NGS). Results Using Luminex-basedassays, DNA from HPV16 was detected in 5% (2/40) CRC tissues from Italian patients. One HPV16 DNA-positive CRC case was subsequently confirmed positive for E6*I mRNA. Cutaneous beta HPV types were detected in 10% (4/40) adjacent tissues only, namely HPV111 (n = 3) and HPV120 (n = 1), while gamma HPV168 (n = 1) and HPV199 (n = 1) types were detected in adjacent and in tumor tissues, respectively. The NGS analysis of the CRC Czech samples identified HPV sequences from mucosal alpha-3 (HPV89), alpha-7 (HPV18, 39, 68 and 70) and alpha-10 species (HPV11), as well as cutaneous beta-1 (HPV20, 24, 93, 98, 105,124) beta-2 (HPV23), beta-3 (HPV49) and gamma-1 species (HPV205). Conclusions Our findings indicate that HPV types belonging to the mucosal alpha, and the ‘cutaneous’ beta and gamma genera can be detected in the colonic mucosal samples with a low prevalence rate and a low number of HPV reads by Luminex and NGS, respectively. However, additional studies are required to corroborate these findings.

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