Differential T helper cell responses to human papillomavirus type 16 E7 related to viral clearance or persistence in patients with cervical neoplasia: a longitudinal study.
De Gruijl, T D ; Bontkes, H J ; Walboomers, J M ; Stukart, M J ; Doekhie, F S ; Remmink, A J ; Helmerhorst, T J ; Verheijen, R H ; Duggan-Keen, Margaret F ; Stern, Peter L ... show 2 more
De Gruijl, T D
Bontkes, H J
Walboomers, J M
Stukart, M J
Doekhie, F S
Remmink, A J
Helmerhorst, T J
Verheijen, R H
Duggan-Keen, Margaret F
Stern, Peter L
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Abstract
T-cell-mediated immune responses against oncogenic human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are believed to play a role in the prevention of cervical carcinogenesis. The in vitro production of interleukin 2 by CD4+ T helper (Th) cells in response to overlapping 20-mer peptides covering the HPV-16 E7 oncoprotein sequence was determined in 72 women with cytological evidence of premalignant cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) who participated in a nonintervention follow-up (FU) study. In addition, 15 HPV-16 + cervical carcinoma patients were tested. Positive Th cell reactivity was restricted to patients infected by HPV-16 and related types and showed a strong association with viral persistence and disease progression, as evidenced by the high frequency of positive responders among women with persistent HPV-16 infections who ended FU with high-grade CIN III lesions [14 of 15 (93%)]. Women with cervical carcinoma showed responses at a significantly reduced rate [7 of 15 (47%); P = 0.014]. Over the FU period (10-34 months), the level of E7-induced interleukin 2 production from the lymphocytes of CIN patients who had cleared HPV-16 infection showed an inverse correlation with time relative to the last positive HPV DNA test, with 8 of 13 of these patients showing positive responses after clearance. By contrast, among women with persistent HPV-16 infections and developing CIN III lesions (n = 8), there was a rise in Th cell activity over the course of FU. The majority of women responded to an immunogenic region in the carboxyl terminus of the E7 protein (amino acids 67-98). The observed HPV-16 E7-specific Th cell responses may develop as a consequence of increased antigen availability resulting either from clearance or from progression of cervical lesions.
Description
Date
1998-04-15
Publisher
Collections
Keywords
Uterine Cervical Cancer
Type
Article
Citation
Differential T helper cell responses to human papillomavirus type 16 E7 related to viral clearance or persistence in patients with cervical neoplasia: a longitudinal study. 1998, 58 (8):1700-6 Cancer Res.