A Novel In Vivo Infection Model To Study Papillomavirus-Mediated Disease of the Female Reproductive Tract

Tractable and efficient models of papillomavirus-induced pathogenesis are limited due to the strict species-specific and tissue-specific tropism of these viruses. Here, we report a novel preclinical murine model of papillomavirus-induced cervicovaginal disease in wild-type, immunocompetent mice usin...

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Main Authors: Megan E. Spurgeon, Aayushi Uberoi, Stephanie M. McGregor, Tao Wei, Ella Ward-Shaw, Paul F. Lambert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2019-03-01
Series:mBio
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00180-19
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spelling doaj-c1dd035cb1be48d3937d1fcfa7b8c2902021-07-02T04:24:27ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112019-03-01102e00180-1910.1128/mBio.00180-19A Novel In Vivo Infection Model To Study Papillomavirus-Mediated Disease of the Female Reproductive TractMegan E. SpurgeonAayushi UberoiStephanie M. McGregorTao WeiElla Ward-ShawPaul F. LambertTractable and efficient models of papillomavirus-induced pathogenesis are limited due to the strict species-specific and tissue-specific tropism of these viruses. Here, we report a novel preclinical murine model of papillomavirus-induced cervicovaginal disease in wild-type, immunocompetent mice using the recently discovered murine papillomavirus, MmuPV1. In this model, MmuPV1 establishes persistent viral infections in the mucosal epithelia of the female reproductive tract, a necessary component needed to accurately mimic HPV-mediated neoplastic disease in humans. Persistent MmuPV1 infections were able to induce progressive neoplastic disease and carcinogenesis, either alone or in combination with previously identified cofactors of papillomavirus-induced disease. This new model will provide a much-needed platform for basic and translational studies on both papillomavirus infection and associated disease in immunocompetent mice.Papillomaviruses exhibit species-specific tropism, thereby limiting understanding and research of several aspects of HPV infection and carcinogenesis. The discovery of a murine papillomavirus (MmuPV1) provides the opportunity to study papillomavirus infections in a tractable, in vivo laboratory model. MmuPV1 infects and causes disease in the cutaneous epithelium, as well as the mucosal epithelia of the oral cavity and anogenital tract. In this report, we describe a murine model of MmuPV1 infection and neoplastic disease in the female reproductive tracts of wild-type immunocompetent FVB mice. Low-grade dysplastic lesions developed in reproductive tracts of FVB mice infected with MmuPV1 for 4 months, and mice infected for 6 months developed significantly worse disease, including squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). We also tested the contribution of estrogen and/or UV radiation (UVR), two cofactors we previously identified as being involved in papillomavirus-mediated disease, to cervicovaginal disease. Similar to HPV16 transgenic mice, exogenous estrogen treatment induced high-grade precancerous lesions in the reproductive tracts of MmuPV1-infected mice by 4 months and together with MmuPV1 efficiently induced SCC by 6 months. UV radiation and exogenous estrogen cooperated to promote carcinogenesis in MmuPV1-infected mice. This murine infection model represents the first instance of de novo papillomavirus-mediated carcinogenesis in the female reproductive tract of wild-type mice resulting from active virus infection and is also the first report of the female hormone estrogen contributing to this process. This model will provide an additional platform for fundamental studies on papillomavirus infection, cervicovaginal disease, and the role of cellular cofactors during papillomavirus-induced carcinogenesis.https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00180-19cancercervixinfectious diseasemousepapillomavirus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Megan E. Spurgeon
Aayushi Uberoi
Stephanie M. McGregor
Tao Wei
Ella Ward-Shaw
Paul F. Lambert
spellingShingle Megan E. Spurgeon
Aayushi Uberoi
Stephanie M. McGregor
Tao Wei
Ella Ward-Shaw
Paul F. Lambert
A Novel In Vivo Infection Model To Study Papillomavirus-Mediated Disease of the Female Reproductive Tract
mBio
cancer
cervix
infectious disease
mouse
papillomavirus
author_facet Megan E. Spurgeon
Aayushi Uberoi
Stephanie M. McGregor
Tao Wei
Ella Ward-Shaw
Paul F. Lambert
author_sort Megan E. Spurgeon
title A Novel In Vivo Infection Model To Study Papillomavirus-Mediated Disease of the Female Reproductive Tract
title_short A Novel In Vivo Infection Model To Study Papillomavirus-Mediated Disease of the Female Reproductive Tract
title_full A Novel In Vivo Infection Model To Study Papillomavirus-Mediated Disease of the Female Reproductive Tract
title_fullStr A Novel In Vivo Infection Model To Study Papillomavirus-Mediated Disease of the Female Reproductive Tract
title_full_unstemmed A Novel In Vivo Infection Model To Study Papillomavirus-Mediated Disease of the Female Reproductive Tract
title_sort novel in vivo infection model to study papillomavirus-mediated disease of the female reproductive tract
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mBio
issn 2150-7511
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Tractable and efficient models of papillomavirus-induced pathogenesis are limited due to the strict species-specific and tissue-specific tropism of these viruses. Here, we report a novel preclinical murine model of papillomavirus-induced cervicovaginal disease in wild-type, immunocompetent mice using the recently discovered murine papillomavirus, MmuPV1. In this model, MmuPV1 establishes persistent viral infections in the mucosal epithelia of the female reproductive tract, a necessary component needed to accurately mimic HPV-mediated neoplastic disease in humans. Persistent MmuPV1 infections were able to induce progressive neoplastic disease and carcinogenesis, either alone or in combination with previously identified cofactors of papillomavirus-induced disease. This new model will provide a much-needed platform for basic and translational studies on both papillomavirus infection and associated disease in immunocompetent mice.Papillomaviruses exhibit species-specific tropism, thereby limiting understanding and research of several aspects of HPV infection and carcinogenesis. The discovery of a murine papillomavirus (MmuPV1) provides the opportunity to study papillomavirus infections in a tractable, in vivo laboratory model. MmuPV1 infects and causes disease in the cutaneous epithelium, as well as the mucosal epithelia of the oral cavity and anogenital tract. In this report, we describe a murine model of MmuPV1 infection and neoplastic disease in the female reproductive tracts of wild-type immunocompetent FVB mice. Low-grade dysplastic lesions developed in reproductive tracts of FVB mice infected with MmuPV1 for 4 months, and mice infected for 6 months developed significantly worse disease, including squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). We also tested the contribution of estrogen and/or UV radiation (UVR), two cofactors we previously identified as being involved in papillomavirus-mediated disease, to cervicovaginal disease. Similar to HPV16 transgenic mice, exogenous estrogen treatment induced high-grade precancerous lesions in the reproductive tracts of MmuPV1-infected mice by 4 months and together with MmuPV1 efficiently induced SCC by 6 months. UV radiation and exogenous estrogen cooperated to promote carcinogenesis in MmuPV1-infected mice. This murine infection model represents the first instance of de novo papillomavirus-mediated carcinogenesis in the female reproductive tract of wild-type mice resulting from active virus infection and is also the first report of the female hormone estrogen contributing to this process. This model will provide an additional platform for fundamental studies on papillomavirus infection, cervicovaginal disease, and the role of cellular cofactors during papillomavirus-induced carcinogenesis.
topic cancer
cervix
infectious disease
mouse
papillomavirus
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00180-19
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