dc.description.abstract |
Persistent infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) is the primary cause of cervical cancer
worldwide. Notably, women co-infected with HPV and human immunodeficiency virus type 1
(HIV-1) have a six-fold higher lifetime risk of developing cervical cancer compared to those
without HIV, even when adhering to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and achieving T-cell
reconstitution. While chronic HIV-1 infection is known to cause inflammation, how paracrine
signals from immune cells alter signaling in cervical cells remain poorly understood. To address
this, we conducted global transcriptomics analysis on cervical swabs from Kenyan women with
HPV, stratified by HIV-1 and cancer status. Strikingly, women with HIV-1 showed cancer-like
gene expression patterns in non-cancerous cervical epithelial cells. Complementary global mass
spectrometry (MS) proteomics of cervical cells exposed to the secretome of HIV-1 infected
primary CD4+ T-cells revealed altered expression of proteins in MAPK, PI3K-AKT, and β-catenin
signaling pathways. Integrative network analyses of transcriptomic and proteomic datasets
revealed that HIV-1 altered gene expression in key pathways known to drive cervical cancer,
including genes commonly mutated in HIV-1-naïve disease. Notably, IRS-1, a key PI3K-AKT
pathway activator, was found to be consistently upregulated in both participant samples and cell
culture models, as were interferon-stimulated genes. Phosphoproteomics MS analysis confirmed
PI3K-AKT pathway activation in cervical cells exposed to conditioned media from HIV-1-infected
T-cells. Together, our findings uncover how HIV-1 reshapes cervical cell signaling via paracrine
mechanisms and highlights the PI3K pathway as a potential therapeutic target in HIV-associated
cervical cancer. |
en_US |