HHMI News
  Top Stories  
dashed line
Research News
dashed line

Search for Epigenetic Decoder Leads Scientists to Rett Syndromesmall arrow

dashed line

Scientists Find Mechanism that Triggers Immune Responses to DNAsmall arrow

dashed line

New Software Speeds Analysis of Animal Behaviorsmall arrow

dashed line

Moresmall arrow

dashed line
  Science Education News  
dashed line
  Institute News  
dashed line
  NewsSrch  
dashed line
  Noticias  

FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION:


Jim Keeley
(301) 215-8858
keeleyj@hhmi.org
dashed line Jennifer Michalowski
(301) 215-8576
michalow@hhmi.org
dashed line Howard Hughes
Medical Institute
4000 Jones Bridge Road Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789
(301) 215-8500


News Alert
Sign Up
Research News

June 13, 2005
New Technique to Mass-Produce Human Papillomavirus May Lead to Gains Against Cervical Cancer

Researchers may be on the verge of exploiting the vulnerabilities of a virus that causes cervical cancer, thanks to a newly developed technique that enables scientists to mass-produce human papillomavirus (HPV) in the laboratory.

HPV, which exists in more than 100 forms, is the most prevalent sexually transmitted infection. Transmission of HPV can also occur non-sexually. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, approximately 20 million people in the United States are currently infected with HPV. At least 50 percent of sexually active men and women will acquire genital HPV infection at some point in their lives. By age 50, at least 80 percent of women will have acquired genital HPV infection.


“We couldnt pursue a number of experimental approaches because of the small amounts of virus available.”
Paul Ahlquist

Although the infection is usually harmless, certain types of HPV are responsible for nearly all cases of cervical cancer, and other types contribute to about a quarter of head and neck cancers and some skin cancers. A more common, less virulent form of the virus causes genital warts.

HHMI Media
hpv image
Human Papillomavirus
The illustration shows a view of the molecular surface of the atomic model of papillomavirus... more small arrow


Image: Courtesy of the Harrison Laboratory

Using the new technique scientists can quickly produce a thousand times more infectious virus per culture dish than they could using conventional methods. Researchers are hopeful that this advance could lead to new antiviral drugs and to vaccines that would trigger the immune system to attack at an earlier stage in the virus's life cycle to stop HPV before it can replicate.

The researchers, led by Paul Ahlquist, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, published an article describing their new technique on June 13, 2005, in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences . Ahlquist and co-authors Dohun Pyeon and Paul Lambert are at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

The primary obstacle to producing HPV in the laboratory has been that in the early stage of its infective cycle, the virus lurks in undifferentiated basal epithelial (skin) cells, said Ahlquist. Once there, it remains in a diffuse form at low levels, limiting its visibility to the immune system.

Only after the epithelial cells begin differentiating does the virus emerge as distinct, infective viral particles, called virions. Thus, said Ahlquist, infectious HPV virus particles could only be obtained by laboriously differentiating cultured cells into artificial skin. This process takes weeks, and produces small amounts of virions, which permitted only limited study of the virus, said Ahlquist.

“The available culture techniques limited the ability to study critical early stages of infection,” said Ahlquist. “We couldn't pursue a number of experimental approaches because of the small amounts of virus available,” he said. “Also, we were restricted in genetically manipulating the virus because the available approaches required a fully functional viral genome to make infectious virus.”

Two discoveries made it possible to develop a mass-production technique for the virus, said Ahlquist. Researchers had long known that the HPV capsid proteins, which were necessary for virion formation, could self-assemble. Also, said Ahlquist, John Schiller and his colleagues at the National Institutes of Health recently found that by introducing the genes for these self-assembling capsid proteins into cells along with smaller pieces of target DNA, the target genes could be packaged into viral like particles.

Based on these findings, Ahlquist and his colleagues developed a technique by which they could introduce the full HPV genome along with the genes for HPV capsid proteins into human cells and manipulate them to produce active, infectious viral particles. The resulting technique enables the scientists to produce over a thousand times more infectious virus per culture dish and takes only two days, he said.

“With this new system of mass-producing packaged, replicating virions, we also can create mutations at will in the virus genome and recover these mutant genomes in infectious virus particles, to study their effects on the virus's ability to infect its target cell,” said Ahlquist.

Importantly, said Ahlquist, the system successfully produces multiple types of HPV. “We found no specificity of this technique, and there appears to be no reason this method cannot be extended to other subtypes,” he said.

The researchers plan to use their production technique to study the early process of infection and to search for vulnerabilities in that process, said Ahlquist. “The early stages of infection—before the virus becomes established—could be a very important phase for intervention,” he said.

Ahlquist also said that the production technique could offer a way to screen for HPV antiviral drugs and could lead to enhanced vaccines that consist of live attenuated virus. “Current vaccines in clinical trials consist of capsid proteins and trigger an immune response to those proteins,” he said. “However, in its earliest stage, papillomavirus does not express those proteins, making the virus invisible to that immune response.

“A sufficiently non-virulent, attenuated virus that would express early gene products could raise additional immune responses against the virus in other stages of its life cycle.” Such a vaccine, he suggested, could offer further important advantages against HPV and its associated cancers.

   

MORE HEADLINES

bullet icon

INSTITUTE NEWS

11.30.12 | 

Erin O’Shea Named Chief Scientific Officer at HHMI

11.26.12 | 

HHMI Launches Tangled Bank Studios

11.15.12 | 

Eric Betzig to Deliver Public Talk at Janelia Farm
Noticias del HHMI Search News Archive

Download Story PDF

Requires Adobe Reader
Versión en españolsmall arrow

HHMI INVESTIGATOR

Paul  Ahlquist
Paul Ahlquist
abstract:
Virus Replication and Virus-Host Interactions
 

Related Links

AT HHMI

bullet icon

Atomic Model Reveals New Details About the Virus that Causes Cervical Cancer
(09.16.02)

bullet icon

Stepping Off the Brake
(02.27.98)

bullet icon

Unexpected Links Found Between Many RNA Viruses
(03.25.02)

dashed line
 Back to Topto the top
© 2013 Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A philanthropy serving society through biomedical research and science education.
4000 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789 | (301) 215-8500 | email: webmaster@hhmi.org