Molecular biology of human papillomavirus infection and cervical cancer
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
HPVs (human papillomaviruses) infect epithelial cells and cause a variety of lesions ranging from common warts/verrucas to cervical neoplasia and cancer. Over 100 different HPV types have been identified so far, with a subset of these being classified as high risk. High-risk HPV DNA is found in almost all cervical cancers (>99.7%), with HPV16 being the most prevalent type in both low-grade disease and cervical neoplasia. Productive infection by high-risk HPV types is manifest as cervical flat warts or condyloma that shed infectious virions from their surface. Viral genomes are maintained as episomes in the basal layer, with viral gene expression being tightly controlled as the infected cells move towards the…
Citation impact
1,057
total citations
- FWCI
- 27.27
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 185
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Biology
- Cervical cancer
- HPV infection
- Oncogene
- Cancer research
- Viral Oncogene
- Gene
- Virology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Responsible consumption and production
No related works found for this paper.