Complex HPV-human DNA structures revealed by large-scale DNA analyses in an HPV-cancer derived cell line
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Most human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated cancers harbor viral DNA integrated into the human genome as extrachromosomal circles, intrachromosomal segments, or both. Distinguishing intrachromosomal from identical-sequence extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA) by sequencing alone is challenging, and the architecture of large-scale HPV-human DNA structures remains incompletely understood. To address this, we applied complementary genomic tools, spanning single-nucleotide to megabase resolution, to the HPV16-positive oropharyngeal cancer-cell line UM-SCC-47. These revealed that an initial integration event formed a 23 kb extrachromosomal heterocatemer circle comprising 7.5 kb of HPV16 DNA and 16 kb of the human TP63 gene. Subsequent genomic rearrangements generated heterocatemer tandem arrays extending to 0.6 megabases, plus additional large-scale rearrangements involving the HPV- TP63 structures, as revealed by long-read DNA sequencing and optical genome mapping. Fluorescent in situ Hybridization (FISH) showed that the heterocatemers were intrachromosomally localized at chromosome 3 at the TP63 locus in 100% of the cells. Long-read RNA sequencing further showed that these intrachromosomal templates produced spliced, polyadenylated transcripts. A subset of cells also harbored HPV16 ecDNA derived from the intrachromosomal HPV- TP63 DNAs. These findings define previously unrecognized higher-order architecture of integrated HPV DNA and highlight the power of FISH for distinguishing intrachromosomal from extrachromosomal DNA structures.