Pathogenesis of Human Papillomaviruses in Differentiating Epithelia
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Abstract
Human papillomaviruses (HPV) are the etiological agents of cervical and other anogenital malignancies. Over 100 different types of HPVs have been identified to date, and all target epithelial tissues for infection. One-third of HPV types specifically infect the genital tract, and a subset of these are the causative agents of anogenital cancers. Other HPV types that infect the genital tract induce benign hyperproliferative lesions or genital warts. The productive life cycle of HPVs is linked to epithelial differentiation. Papillomaviruses are thought to infect cells in the basal layer of stratified epithelia and establish their genomes as multicopy nuclear episomes. In these cells, viral DNA is replicated along…
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Biology
- Virology
- Viral replication
- Cellular differentiation
- Gene
- Viral life cycle
- Cell biology
- Viral protein
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Responsible consumption and production
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