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Papillomaviruses: a systematic review

Abstract

In the last decades, a group of viruses has received great attention due to its relationship with cancer development and its wide distribution throughout the vertebrates: the papillomaviruses. In this article, we aim to review some of the most relevant reports concerning the use of bovines as an experimental model for studies related to papillomaviruses. Moreover, the obtained data contributes to the development of strategies against the clinical consequences of bovine papillomaviruses (BPV) that have led to drastic hazards to the herds. To overcome the problem, the vaccines that we have been developing involve recombinant DNA technology, aiming at prophylactic and therapeutic procedures. It is important to point out that these strategies can be used as models for innovative procedures against HPV, as this virus is the main causal agent of cervical cancer, the second most fatal cancer in women.

Keywords:
bovine papillomavirus (BPV); bovine papillomatosis; carcinogenesis; natural history

A brief history of the papillomavirus (PVs) on carcinogenesis

In the last decades, novel diagnostic methods and therapies have been implemented in an attempt to combat cancer. However, the number of patients that succumb to the disease has increased globally (Varga et al., 2014Varga J, Oliveira T and Greten F (2014) The architect who never sleeps: Tumor-induced plasticity. FEBS Lett 588:2422-2427.). This negative result emphasizes the complexity of the oncogenic process, which has a multifactorial cause. Among the etiological factors associated to cancer are the infectious agents, such as bacteria and viruses.

The association between cancer and infectious agents has been discussed for centuries (Graner, 2000Graner J (2000) History of infectious diseases oncology, from Galen to Rous. In: Goedert JJ (ed) Infectious Causes of Cancer. Humana Press, Nova Jersey, pp 3-30.). In 1858, George B. Wood stated in his book Practice of Medicine that cancer could be disseminated as an infectious disease (Graner, 2000Graner J (2000) History of infectious diseases oncology, from Galen to Rous. In: Goedert JJ (ed) Infectious Causes of Cancer. Humana Press, Nova Jersey, pp 3-30.). However, the association between cancer and infectious agents was only implied in the second half of 19th century by Rudolf Maier (Graner, 2000Graner J (2000) History of infectious diseases oncology, from Galen to Rous. In: Goedert JJ (ed) Infectious Causes of Cancer. Humana Press, Nova Jersey, pp 3-30.; zur Hausen, 2009zur Hausen H (2009) The search for infectious causes of human cancers: Where and why. Virology 392:1-10.). The major difficulty in demonstrating this association can be attributed to the time-lapse of 15-40 years between the infection and the development of the first clinical signs that would allow cancer diagnosis (zur Hausen, 2009zur Hausen H (2009) The search for infectious causes of human cancers: Where and why. Virology 392:1-10.). Yet, in the last decades, the involvement of infectious agents with cancer has aroused great attention, as one in ten human malignancies is caused by these pathogens (Ribeiro-Müller and Müller, 2014Ribeiro-Müller L and Müller M (2014) Prophylactic papillomavirus vaccines. Clin Dermatol 32:235-247.).

Current studies estimate that 23% of all human malignancies are associated with infectious agents (zur Hausen, 2009zur Hausen H (2009) The search for infectious causes of human cancers: Where and why. Virology 392:1-10.; WHO 2013WHO (2013) Global cancer rates could increase by 50% to 15 million by 2020. www.who.int/mediacente/news/releases/2003/pr27/en.
www.who.int/mediacente/news/releases/200...
; Brücher and Jamall, 2014Brücher B and Jamall I (2014) Epistemology of the origin of cancer: A new paradigm. BMC Cancer 15:1-15.; Bravo and Felez-Sanchez, 2015Bravo I and Felez-Sanchez M (2015) Papillomaviruses: Viral evolution, cancer and evolutionary medicine. Evol Med Public Health 2015:32-51.). Among them, human papillomavirus (HPV) is responsible for 27.9% (zur Hausen, 2009zur Hausen H (2009) The search for infectious causes of human cancers: Where and why. Virology 392:1-10.) to 30.0% (Bravo et al., 2010Bravo I, Sanjosé S and Gottschling M (2010) The clinical importance of understanding the evolution of papillomaviruses. Trends Microbiol 18:432-438.) of all incident cancer cases in the world. This data is very concerning, once 75% of the global population lives in developing countries (Marrazzo and Holmes, 2013Marrazzo J and Holmes K (2013) Infecções sexualmente transmissívies: Consideraçoes gerais e abordagem clinica. In: Longo D, Fauci A, Kasper D, Hauser S, Jameson J and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18a ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 1095-11111.), where the lack of information about the HPV and others sexually transmitted diseases (STD) contributes to the increase of HPV-associated cancers. According to the World Health Organization (WHO) (http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs380/en/), 85% of cervical cancer cases occurs in less developed countries.

Papillomaviruses (PVs) are not only associated to human cancers, but also with animal malignancies. Although there is no epidemiological data about the number of PV-associated incident animal cancers, this association is recognized since 1932 (Shope and Hurst, 1933Shope R and Hurst E (1933) Infectious papillomatosis of rabbits. J Exp Med 58:607-624.; Graner, 2000Graner J (2000) History of infectious diseases oncology, from Galen to Rous. In: Goedert JJ (ed) Infectious Causes of Cancer. Humana Press, Nova Jersey, pp 3-30.). Moreover, veterinary research demonstrates an increase in both benign and malignant tumors (Misdorp, 1996Misdorp W (1996) Veterinary cancer epidemiology. Vet Q 18:32-36.), particularly in domestic animals (cats and dogs). Furthermore, animal neoplasms are important models for the study of human oncogenic process (Misdorp, 1996Misdorp W (1996) Veterinary cancer epidemiology. Vet Q 18:32-36.), by allowing the identification of molecular mechanisms associated to carcinogenesis (Cotchin, 1962Cotchin E (1962) Problems of comparative oncology. Vet Pathol 26:633-648., 1976Cotchin E (1976) Comparative oncology: The veterinary contribution. Proc R Soc Med 69:649-656.) and novel therapeutics (Misdorp, 1996Misdorp W (1996) Veterinary cancer epidemiology. Vet Q 18:32-36.), and emphasizing the importance of comparative oncology.

In this review, we summarize relevant data and advances in papillomaviruses biology, including viral evolution, pathogenic mechanism of viral proteins and oncoproteins, ways of transmission, pathogenesis and oncogenesis. We also discuss the importance of BPV as a study model for HPV-associated oncogenic process.

Genome organization of PVs

PVs are small, circular, double-stranded DNA viruses, able to infect all vertebrates (zur Hausen, 2009zur Hausen H (2009) The search for infectious causes of human cancers: Where and why. Virology 392:1-10.), as shown in Table 1. PVs belong to Papillomaviridae family (Bravo and Felez-Sanchez, 2015Bravo I and Felez-Sanchez M (2015) Papillomaviruses: Viral evolution, cancer and evolutionary medicine. Evol Med Public Health 2015:32-51.), which presents tropism for epithelial and mucous tissue (Cotchin, 1962Cotchin E (1962) Problems of comparative oncology. Vet Pathol 26:633-648.). These viruses have genomes between 6,953 bp (CmPV1 - Chelonia mydas papillomavirus type 1) to 8,607 bp (CRPV1 - Cotton rabbit papillomavirus type 1), divided in three regions: early (E), late (L) and long codon region (LCR), as showed in Figure 1 (van Doorslaer, 2013van Doorslaer K (2013) Evolution of the papillomaviridae. Virology 445:11-20.). The E region codifies replication proteins (E1, E2, E4), and the oncoproteins E5, E6 and E7 (Bocaneti et al., 2014Bocaneti F, Altamura G, Corteggio A, Velescu E, Roperto F and Borzacchiello G (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: New insights into an old disease. Transbound Emerg Dis 63:1-10.). The L region codifies capsid proteins (L1 and L2) (van Doorslaer, 2013van Doorslaer K (2013) Evolution of the papillomaviridae. Virology 445:11-20.). The LCR does not codify any protein, but has the origin of replication (ori) (van Doorslaer, 2013van Doorslaer K (2013) Evolution of the papillomaviridae. Virology 445:11-20.). Currently, more than 280 different types of PVs are described. More than 200 types infect humans (Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.), which are classified in 49 genera according to the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) (Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.). Phylogenetic classification of PVs are based on the L1 open reading frame (ORF) sequence homology, since this is the most conserved ORF among the different PV types (de Villiers et al., 2004de Villiers E, Fauquet C, Broker T, Bernard H and zur Hausen H (2004) Classification of papillomaviruses. Virology 324:17-27., de Villiers, 2013de Villiers E (2013) Cross-roads in the classification of papillomaviruses. Virology 445:2-10.; Melo et al., 2014Melo T, Carvalho R, Mazzucchelli-de-Souza J, Diniz N, Vasconcelos S, Assaf S, Araldi R, Ruiz R, Kerkis I, Beçak W, et al. (2014) Phylogenetic classification and clinical aspects of a new putative Deltapapillomavirus associated with skin lesions in cattle. Genet Mol Res 13:2458-2469.; Munday et al., 2015Munday J, Thomson N, Dunowska M, Knight C, Laurie R and Hills S (2015) Genomic characterisation of the feline sarcoid-associated papillomavirus and proposed classification as Bos taurus papillomavirus type 14. Vet Microbiol 177:289-295.). According to this system, differences over 10% on L1 ORF sequence determine a novel virus type, while differences between 2-10%, a novel virus subtype (de Villiers, 2013de Villiers E (2013) Cross-roads in the classification of papillomaviruses. Virology 445:2-10.).

Table 1
Papillomaviruses identified in different vertebrates
Figure 1
BPV genome organization and differential protein expression: double strand DNA circular genome divided in early (E), late (L) and long codon region (LCR). Early region codifies replication proteins (E1, E2, E4, E5, E6 and E7). These proteins are expressed from basal to cornified layer, being involved with virus replication and virion release (E4). Late region codifies L1 and L2 capsid proteins. Once these structural proteins are involved with virus assembly, they are expressed in the most differenciated epithelium layers (granular and cornified).

Evolutionary history of papillomaviruses

Although the virus origin is still uncertain (Bernard, 1994Bernard H (1994) Coevolution of papillomaviruses with human populations. Trends Microbiol 2:18-21.; Holland and Domingo, 1998Holland J and Domingo E (1998) Origin and evolution of viruses. Virus Genes 16:13-21.), studies about PVs suggest that they arose concomitantly with tetrapods in the Carboniferous period of the Paleozoic era (330 million years ago) (Rector and Van Ranst, 2013Rector A and Van Ranst M (2013) Animal papillomaviruses. Virology 445:213-223.). This makes the PVs one of the oldest and largest known virus family (Cubie, 2013Cubie H (2013) Diseases associated with human papillomavirus infection. Virology 445:21-34.; Rector and Van Ranst, 2013Rector A and Van Ranst M (2013) Animal papillomaviruses. Virology 445:213-223.).

Studies based on molecular phylogeny suggest that these viruses originated in Africa, from where they disseminated to all continents (Bernard, 1994Bernard H (1994) Coevolution of papillomaviruses with human populations. Trends Microbiol 2:18-21.). It was not a pandemic dissemination, occurring over one million years (Bernard, 1994Bernard H (1994) Coevolution of papillomaviruses with human populations. Trends Microbiol 2:18-21.).

PVs genomic diversification occurred together with mammals diversification, being influenced by multiple evolutionary forces (Bravo et al., 2010Bravo I, Sanjosé S and Gottschling M (2010) The clinical importance of understanding the evolution of papillomaviruses. Trends Microbiol 18:432-438.), such as the addition of sequence boxes, previously present in their host (García-Vallvé et al., 2005García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521.). Thus, PVs co-evolved with their respective host (Gottschling et al., 2007Gottschling M, Stamatakis A, Nindl I, Stockfleth E, Alonso A and Bravo I (2007) Multiple evolutionary mechanisms drive papillomavirus diversification. Mol Biol Evol 24:1242-1258.). An evidence of this co-evolution is the similarity in guanine and cytosine (G + C) content; HPVs have 41-49% of G + C, and humans 40-42% (Black, 1968Black P (1968) The oncogenic DNA viruses: A review of in vitro transformation studies. Annu Rev Microbiol 22:391-426.). Another evidence of this co-evolution is seen with the use of in situ hybridization probe for Shope papilloma virus (CRPV), which presents homology with the rabbit genome sequences (Black, 1968Black P (1968) The oncogenic DNA viruses: A review of in vitro transformation studies. Annu Rev Microbiol 22:391-426.). Moreover, replicative mechanisms of PVs and their host are similar, reinforcing co-evolution (Leatherwood, 1998Leatherwood J (1998) Emerging mechanisms of eukaryotic DNA replication initiation. Curr Opin Cell Biol 10:742-748.). These data suggest that PVs could have originated from genomic fragments of amniotes' common ancestor (van Doorlaer and Burk, 2010van Doorlaer K and Burk R (2010) Evolution of humana papillomavirus carcinogenicity. Adv Virus Res 77:41-62.; Rector and Van Ranst, 2013Rector A and Van Ranst M (2013) Animal papillomaviruses. Virology 445:213-223.; van Doorslaer, 2013van Doorslaer K (2013) Evolution of the papillomaviridae. Virology 445:11-20.).

Animal domestication favored the enzootic transmission of PVs (Gottschling et al., 2007Gottschling M, Stamatakis A, Nindl I, Stockfleth E, Alonso A and Bravo I (2007) Multiple evolutionary mechanisms drive papillomavirus diversification. Mol Biol Evol 24:1242-1258.). In this process, novel strategies of adaptation were required to guarantee the infection of novel hosts (Gottschling et al., 2011Gottschling M, Goker M, Stamatakis A, Bininda-Emonds O, Nindl I and Bravo I (2011) Quantifying the phylodynamic forces driving papillomavirus evolution. Mol Biol Evol 28:2101-2113.). These adaptations favored PVs evolution, conferring specificity in terms of host to all members of Papillomaviridae family, except for BPV, which is able to promote cross-infection (Bernard, 1994Bernard H (1994) Coevolution of papillomaviruses with human populations. Trends Microbiol 2:18-21.).

Based on this, García-Vallvé et al. (2005)García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521. described a hypothetical model to recreate PVs evolution. This model supports the existence of a proto-papillomavirus, comprised by URR-E1-E2-L2-L1 genomic regions, able to infect primitive amniotes. Along mammals divergence (150 million years ago), this proto-papillomavirus was added with E6 and E7 ORFs. From this moment, PVs' interaction with their host became more specific, resulting in a co-evolution. This process also resulted in the addition of E5 ORF in the hot spot between E2 and L2 ORFs (Bravo and Felez-Sanchez, 2015Bravo I and Felez-Sanchez M (2015) Papillomaviruses: Viral evolution, cancer and evolutionary medicine. Evol Med Public Health 2015:32-51.). Phylogenetic analyses point out that PVs only acquired oncogenic potential after they infected humans (García-Vallvé et al., 2005García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521.). This suggests that BPV could have originated from HPV transmission to bovines, as a consequence of animal domestication (García-Vallvé et al., 2005García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521.)., which would justify the similarities between these viruses, making the BPV a useful model to HPV studies (Campo, 2006Campo M (2006) Bovine papillomavirus: Old system, new lessons? Papillomavirus research: From natural history to vaccine and beyond. Caister Academic Press, Norfolk, pp 373-387.; Borzacchiello and Roperto, 2008Borzacchiello G and Roperto F (2008) Bovine papillomaviruses, papillomas and cancer in cattle. Vet Res 39:45.; Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.).

Non-oncogenic early (E) proteins expressed by PVs: E1, E2 and E4

E1 and E2 ORFs are expressed after PV infection, once their genetic products are essential to virus replication (Ferraro et al., 2011Ferraro C, Canedo M, Oliveira S, Carvalho M and Dias E (2011) Infecção oral pelo HPV e lesões epiteliais proliferativas associadas. J Bras Patol Médica e Lab 47:451-459.). The E1 ORF is the second most conserved sequence among the PVs (Forslund et al., 1999Forslund O, Antonsson A, Nordin P, Stenquist B and Hansson BG (1999) A broad range of human papillomavirus types detected with a general PCR method suitable for analysis of cutaneous tumours and normal skin. J Gen Virol 80:2437-2443.; Enemark et al., 2000Enemark E, Chen G, Vaughn D, Stenlund A, Joshua-Tor L, Brook S and York N (2000) Crystal structure of the DNA binding domain of the replication initiation protein E1 from papillomavirus. Mol Cell 6:149-158.). and codifies the E1 protein, which has three functional domains: (1) N-terminal, that induces Cdk2 phosphorylation, (2) C-terminal, that acts as ATP-dependent helicase and (3) central, that binds to E2 protein, resulting in E1-E2 complex (García-Vallvé et al., 2005García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521.; Wallace and Galloway, 2014Wallace N and Galloway D (2014) Manipulation of cellular DNA damage repair machinery facilitates propagation of human papillomaviruses. Semin Cancer Biol 26:30-42.). The E1-E2 complex binds to viral replication origin (ori) present in LCR (Enemark et al., 2000Enemark E, Chen G, Vaughn D, Stenlund A, Joshua-Tor L, Brook S and York N (2000) Crystal structure of the DNA binding domain of the replication initiation protein E1 from papillomavirus. Mol Cell 6:149-158.; Schuck and Stenlund, 2015Schuck S and Stenlund A (2015) A conserved regulatory module at the C-terminus of the papillomavirus E1 helicase domain controls E1 helicase assembly. J Virol 89:1129-1142.). Next, the E1 protein forms the di-hexameric complex in ori (Gauson et al., 2016Gauson E, Wang X, Dornan E, Herzyk P, Bristol M and Morgan I (2016) Failure to interact with Brd4 alters the ability of HPV16 E2 to regulate host genome expression and cellular movement. Virus Res 211:1-8.), and recruits replication proteins such as topoisomerase I, DNA polymerase α and replication protein A (RPA), that need to replicate (Schuck and Stenlund, 2015Schuck S and Stenlund A (2015) A conserved regulatory module at the C-terminus of the papillomavirus E1 helicase domain controls E1 helicase assembly. J Virol 89:1129-1142.). Due to its helicase activity, the E1 protein can induce simple strand breaks (SSBs) and double strand breaks (DSBs) in host DNA (Schuck and Stenlund, 2015Schuck S and Stenlund A (2015) A conserved regulatory module at the C-terminus of the papillomavirus E1 helicase domain controls E1 helicase assembly. J Virol 89:1129-1142.).

E2 is a modular protein, composed by two domains: (1) C-terminal and (2) transactivation N-terminal (Wallace and Galloway, 2014Wallace N and Galloway D (2014) Manipulation of cellular DNA damage repair machinery facilitates propagation of human papillomaviruses. Semin Cancer Biol 26:30-42.). The E2 C-terminal binds to Brd4 protein (Gauson et al., 2016Gauson E, Wang X, Dornan E, Herzyk P, Bristol M and Morgan I (2016) Failure to interact with Brd4 alters the ability of HPV16 E2 to regulate host genome expression and cellular movement. Virus Res 211:1-8.). The E2-Brd4 complex interacts with lysine residues in acetylated histones (Schweiger et al., 2006Schweiger M, You J and Howley P (2006) Bromodomain protein 4 mediates the papillomavirus E2 transcriptional activation function. J Virol 80:4276-4285., 2007Schweiger M, Ottinger M, You J and Howley P (2007) Brd4-independent transcriptional repression function of the papillomavirus e2 proteins. J Virol 81:9612-9622.), resulting in an equitable distribution of virus copies after cytokinesis (Campo, 2006Campo M (2006) Bovine papillomavirus: Old system, new lessons? Papillomavirus research: From natural history to vaccine and beyond. Caister Academic Press, Norfolk, pp 373-387.; Wallace and Galloway, 2014Wallace N and Galloway D (2014) Manipulation of cellular DNA damage repair machinery facilitates propagation of human papillomaviruses. Semin Cancer Biol 26:30-42.).

The E2 protein also acts as an E6 and E7 transcriptional regulator (García-Vallvé et al., 2005García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521.; Bogaert et al., 2008Bogaert L, Martens A, Van Poucke M, Ducatelle R, De Cock H, Dewulf J, De Baere C, Peelman L and Gasthuys F (2008a) High prevalence of bovine papillomaviral DNA in the normal skin of equine sarcoid-affected and healthy horses. Vet Microbiol 129:58-68.; Cai et al., 2013Cai Q, Lv L, Shao Q, Li X and Dian A (2013) Human papillomavirus early proteins and apoptosis. Arch Gynecol Obstet 287:541-548.). In high levels, E2 binds to 5′-ACCG(N)4CGGT-3′ palindromic sequence present in four E2 binding sites (E2BSs) in E6 and E7 promoter (P97) (Cai et al., 2013Cai Q, Lv L, Shao Q, Li X and Dian A (2013) Human papillomavirus early proteins and apoptosis. Arch Gynecol Obstet 287:541-548.). This inhibits RNA polymerase II binding, repressing E6 and E7 transcription (García-Vallvé et al., 2005García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521.). However, under low expression levels, E2 recruits transcription factors necessary to form the open transcription complex (Helfer et al., 2014Helfer C, Yan J and You J (2014) The cellular bromodomain protein Brd4 has multiple functions in E2-mediated papillomavirus transcription activation. Viruses 6:3228-3249.; Jang et al., 2014Jang M, Shen K and McBride A (2014) Papillomavirus genomes associate with BRD4 to replicate at fragile sites in the host genome. PLoS Pathog 10:e1004117.). In addition, E2 is an important epigenetic regulator, since the protein interacts with the p300/CBP-p/CAF global transcription activator (Wallace and Galloway, 2014Wallace N and Galloway D (2014) Manipulation of cellular DNA damage repair machinery facilitates propagation of human papillomaviruses. Semin Cancer Biol 26:30-42.). This interaction leads to TP53 hypo-acetylation, reducing p53 expression levels (Wallace and Galloway, 2014Wallace N and Galloway D (2014) Manipulation of cellular DNA damage repair machinery facilitates propagation of human papillomaviruses. Semin Cancer Biol 26:30-42.).

The E4 ORF codifies a family of proteins produced by splicing followed by post-translational modifications (Campo, 1997aCampo M (1997a) Bovine papillomavirus and cancer. Vet J 154:175-188.). The E4 protein is the most expressed protein of PVs (Doorbar, 2013Doorbar J (2013) The E4 protein; structure, function and patterns of expression. Virology 445:80-98.). For this reason, E4 is easily detected in suprabasal and granulosum layers of epidermis (Rampias et al., 2013Rampias T, Sasaki C and Psyrri A (2013) Molecular mechanisms of HPV induced carcinogenesis in head and neck. Oral Oncol 50:356-363.), being recognized as important hallmark of PVs pathogenic activity (Doorbar, 2013Doorbar J (2013) The E4 protein; structure, function and patterns of expression. Virology 445:80-98.). The E4 protein interacts with cytokeratin filamentous, contributing to viral replication (Campo, 1997aCampo M (1997a) Bovine papillomavirus and cancer. Vet J 154:175-188.). Moreover, E4 is associated to virus maturation and extracellular matrix (MEC) remodeling (Ferraro et al., 2011Ferraro C, Canedo M, Oliveira S, Carvalho M and Dias E (2011) Infecção oral pelo HPV e lesões epiteliais proliferativas associadas. J Bras Patol Médica e Lab 47:451-459.).

Late proteins: L1 and L2

The L1 ORF is the most conserved among PVs (Bernard et al., 2006Bernard H, Calleja-Macias I and Dunn S (2006) Genome variation of human papillomavirus types: Phylogenetic and medical implications. Int J Cancer 118:1071-1076.; Haga et al., 2013Haga T, Dong J, Zhu W and Burk R (2013) The many unknown aspects of bovine papillomavirus diversity, infection and pathogenesis. Vet J 197:122-123.), and for this reason it is employed in virus classification (Haga et al., 2013Haga T, Dong J, Zhu W and Burk R (2013) The many unknown aspects of bovine papillomavirus diversity, infection and pathogenesis. Vet J 197:122-123.; de Villiers, 2013de Villiers E (2013) Cross-roads in the classification of papillomaviruses. Virology 445:2-10.). The L1 protein has 55 kDa (Buck et al., 2,013Buck C, Day P and Trus B (2013) The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1. Virology 445:169-174.). and is able to self-organize in pentameric structures that compose the viral capsid (Ribeiro-Müller and Müller, 2014Ribeiro-Müller L and Müller M (2014) Prophylactic papillomavirus vaccines. Clin Dermatol 32:235-247.). It has a central role in viral infection mechanism, allowing the capsid anchorage to heparin sulfate receptors present in cell membrane (Florin et al., 2012Florin L, Sapp M and Spoden G (2012) Host-cell factors involved in papillomavirus entry. Med Microbiol Immunol 201:437-448.). Considering that L1 is a late protein, it is expressed in the most differentiated epithelium layers (Buck et al., 2004Buck C, Pastrana D, Lowy D and Schiller J (2004) Efficient intracellular assembly of papillomaviral vectors. J Virol 78:751.). Therefore, L1 immunodetection has been considered the main evidence of productive infection (Nasir and Reid, 1999Nasir L and Reid S (1999) Bovine papillomaviral gene expression in equine sarcoid tumours. Virus Res 61:171-175.; Costa and Medeiros, 2014Costa R and Medeiros R (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: Opening new trends for comparative pathology. Arch Virol 159:191-198.; Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.), which is characterized by the virus assembly (Green, 1972Green M (1972) Molecular basis for the attack on cancer. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 69:1036-1041.).

The L2 protein has 64-78 kDa (Wang and Roden, 2013Wang J and Roden R (2013) L2, the minor capsid protein of papillomavirus. Virology 445:175-186.). The molecular weight variation is a consequence of post-translational modifications (Wang and Roden, 2013Wang J and Roden R (2013) L2, the minor capsid protein of papillomavirus. Virology 445:175-186.). During the assembly of PV particles, 2 binds to viral DNA, contributing to encapsidation and then to viral release (García-Vallvé et al., 2005García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521.; Campo, 2006Campo M (2006) Bovine papillomavirus: Old system, new lessons? Papillomavirus research: From natural history to vaccine and beyond. Caister Academic Press, Norfolk, pp 373-387.).

A third structural protein (L3) has been described as present exclusively in BPV-4 (Catroxo et al., 2013Catroxo M, Martins A, Petrella S, Souza F and Nastari B (2013) Ultrastructural study of bovine papillomavirus during outbreaks in Brazil. Int J Morphol 31:777-784.). However, its function remains unclear.

Oncogenic proteins expressed by PVs: E5, E6 and E7

E5 oncoprotein

The E5 is the most studied BPV oncoprotein and its transforming potential is known since 1960 (Roberts, 2015Roberts S (2015) Papillomaviruses. eLS 2015:1-11.). The E5 oncoprotein can induce both in vivo and in vitro transformation (Campo, 2006Campo M (2006) Bovine papillomavirus: Old system, new lessons? Papillomavirus research: From natural history to vaccine and beyond. Caister Academic Press, Norfolk, pp 373-387.; Silvestre et al., 2009Silvestre O, Borzacchiello G, Nava D, Iovane G, Russo V, Vecchio D, D’Ausilio F, Gault EA, Campo MS and Paciello O (2009) Bovine papillomavirus type 1 DNA and E5 oncoprotein expression in water buffalo fibropapillomas. Vet Pathol 46:636-641.; Rampias et al., 2013Rampias T, Sasaki C and Psyrri A (2013) Molecular mechanisms of HPV induced carcinogenesis in head and neck. Oral Oncol 50:356-363.; DiMaio, 2014DiMaio D (2014) Viral miniproteins. Annu Rev Microbiol 68:21-43.). Furthermore, it is responsible for the fibrotropism verified in fibropapillomas and equine sarcoids (Chambers et al., 2003aChambers G, Ellsmore V, O’Brien P, Reid S, Love S, Campo M and Nasir L (2003a) Sequence variants of bovine papillomavirus E5 detected in equine sarcoids. Virus Res 96:141-145.; DiMaio, 2014DiMaio D (2014) Viral miniproteins. Annu Rev Microbiol 68:21-43.).

PV-1 E5 is a transmembrane protein (Costa and Medeiros, 2014Costa R and Medeiros R (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: Opening new trends for comparative pathology. Arch Virol 159:191-198.), with 43-44 amino acids, characterized by the presence of a central hydrophobic region, which acts as a transmembrane domain (Burkhardt et al., 1989Burkhardt A, Willingham M, Gay C, Jeang K and Schlegel R (1989) The E5 oncoprotein of bovine papillomavirus is oriented asymmetrically in Golgi and plasma membranes. Virology 339:334-339.; Tomita et al., 2007Tomita Y, Ogawa T, Jin Z and Shirasawa H (2007) Genus specific features of bovine papillomavirus E6, E7, E5 and E8 proteins. Virus Res 124:231-236.; DiMaio, 2014DiMaio D (2014) Viral miniproteins. Annu Rev Microbiol 68:21-43.). E5 also presents two cysteine residues in the C-terminal region that confers stability for the homodimer composed by two E5 monomers (DiMaio, 2014DiMaio D (2014) Viral miniproteins. Annu Rev Microbiol 68:21-43.).

The E5 oncoprotein induces cell membrane composition and dynamic changes, affecting the Golgi complex (Burkhardt et al., 1989Burkhardt A, Willingham M, Gay C, Jeang K and Schlegel R (1989) The E5 oncoprotein of bovine papillomavirus is oriented asymmetrically in Golgi and plasma membranes. Virology 339:334-339.; García-Vallvé et al., 2005García-Vallvé S, Alonso A and Bravo I (2005) Papillomaviruses: Different genes have different histories. Trends Microbiol 13:514-521.; Balcos et al., 2008Balcos L, Borzacchiello G, Russo V, Popescu O, Roperto S and Roperto F (2008) Association of bovine papillomavirus type-2 and urinary bladder tumours in cattle from Romania. Res Vet Sci 85:145-148.). This occurs because E5 is able to bind to the H+-ATPase vacuolar subunit (Burnett et al., 1992Burnett S, Jareborg N and Dimaiot D (1992) Localization of bovine papillomavirus type 1 E5 protein to transformed basal keratinocytes and permissive differentiated cells in fibropapilloma tissue. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 89:5665-5669.), promoting Golgi inner membrane alkalinization (Krawczyk et al., 2010Krawczyk E, Suprynowicz F, Sudarshan S and Schlegel R (2010) Membrane orientation of the human papillomavirus type 16 E5 oncoprotein. J Virol 84:1696.). This leads to major histocompatibility complex II (MHC-II) heavy chain sequestration, conferring an evolutionary mechanism of immune evasion (Venuti et al., 2011Venuti A, Paolini F, Nasir L, Corteggio A, Roperto S, Campo M and Borzacchiello G (2011) Papillomavirus E5?: The smallest oncoprotein with many functions. Mol Cancer 10:140.). In addition, the E5 oncoprotein inhibits the expression of MHC-I and cyclooxygenase (COX) (Borzacchiello, 2007Borzacchiello G (2007) Bovine papillomavirus infections in animals. Commun Curr Res Educ Top Trends Appl Microbiol 673-679.; Tomita et al., 2007Tomita Y, Ogawa T, Jin Z and Shirasawa H (2007) Genus specific features of bovine papillomavirus E6, E7, E5 and E8 proteins. Virus Res 124:231-236.; Venuti et al., 2011Venuti A, Paolini F, Nasir L, Corteggio A, Roperto S, Campo M and Borzacchiello G (2011) Papillomavirus E5?: The smallest oncoprotein with many functions. Mol Cancer 10:140.). These mechanisms contribute to viral infection persistence.

The E5 oncoprotein can bind to ductin, a conexon component, inhibiting the gap junction formation and therefore cell communication (Campo, 1997aCampo M (1997a) Bovine papillomavirus and cancer. Vet J 154:175-188.; Borzacchiello and Roperto, 2008Borzacchiello G and Roperto F (2008) Bovine papillomaviruses, papillomas and cancer in cattle. Vet Res 39:45.). E5 also contributes to focal adhesion loss, affecting cell differentiation (Rampias et al., 2013Rampias T, Sasaki C and Psyrri A (2013) Molecular mechanisms of HPV induced carcinogenesis in head and neck. Oral Oncol 50:356-363.).

The E5 oncoprotein is able to bind to platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGFβR) (Chambers et al., 2003aChambers G, Ellsmore V, O’Brien P, Reid S, Love S, Campo M and Nasir L (2003a) Sequence variants of bovine papillomavirus E5 detected in equine sarcoids. Virus Res 96:141-145.; DiMaio, 2014DiMaio D (2014) Viral miniproteins. Annu Rev Microbiol 68:21-43.; Costa and Medeiros, 2014Costa R and Medeiros R (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: Opening new trends for comparative pathology. Arch Virol 159:191-198.). PDGFβR is a tyrosine-kinase receptor present in the cell surface (Nicolas et al., 2013Nicolas G, Pottier C, Maltête D, Coutant S, Rovelet-Lecrux A, Legallic S, Rousseau S, Vaschalde Y, Guyant-Maréchal L, Augustin J, et al. (2013) Mutation of the PDGFRB gene as a cause of idiopathic basal ganglia calcification. Neurology 80:181-187.). Under normal conditions, PDGFβR is activated by PDGF, which promotes receptor dimerization (DiMaio, 2014DiMaio D (2014) Viral miniproteins. Annu Rev Microbiol 68:21-43.) and activation of different kinases, such as: A-cdk2, MAPK, JNK, PI3K and C-Src (Chambers et al., 2003aChambers G, Ellsmore V, O’Brien P, Reid S, Love S, Campo M and Nasir L (2003a) Sequence variants of bovine papillomavirus E5 detected in equine sarcoids. Virus Res 96:141-145.; Borzacchiello, 2007Borzacchiello G (2007) Bovine papillomavirus infections in animals. Commun Curr Res Educ Top Trends Appl Microbiol 673-679.). However, E5 binding to PDGFβR can lead to phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)-mediated Akt pathway activation (Costa and Medeiros, 2014Costa R and Medeiros R (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: Opening new trends for comparative pathology. Arch Virol 159:191-198.). This activates the D3 cyclin, promoting cell cycle deregulation (Venuti et al., 2011Venuti A, Paolini F, Nasir L, Corteggio A, Roperto S, Campo M and Borzacchiello G (2011) Papillomavirus E5?: The smallest oncoprotein with many functions. Mol Cancer 10:140.; Costa and Medeiros, 2014Costa R and Medeiros R (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: Opening new trends for comparative pathology. Arch Virol 159:191-198.). The PI3K/Akt pathway activation also induces metabolic deregulation in the host cell (Vivanco and Sawyers, 2002Vivanco I and Sawyers C (2002) The phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase-AKT pathway in human cancer. Nat Rev Cancer 2:489-501.; Hennessy et al., 2005Hennessy B, Smith D, Ram P, Lu Y and Mills G (2005) Exploiting the PI3K/AKT pathway for cancer drug discovery. Nat Rev Drug Discov 4:988-1004.). PDGFβR activation also recruits pericytes, stimulating angiogenesis (Pietras and Ostman, 2010Pietras K and Ostman A (2010) Hallmarks of cancer: Interactions with the tumor stroma. Exp Cell Res 316:1324-1331.).

E6 oncoprotein

E6 is a small oncoprotein with 151-158 (HPV) (Ristriani et al., 2000Ristriani T, Masson M, Nominé Y, Laurent C, Lefevre JF, Weiss E and Travé G (2000) HPV oncoprotein E6 is a structure-dependent DNA-binding protein that recognizes four-way junctions. J Mol Biol 296:1189-1203.; Boulet et al., 2007Boulet G, Horvath C, Vanden B, Sahebali S and Bogers J (2007) Human papillomavirus: E6 and E7 oncogenes. Int J Biochem Cell Biol 39:2006-2011.) or 137 amino acids (BPV-1) (Tong et al., 1998Tong X, Boll W, Kirchhausen T and Peter M (1998) Interaction of the bovine papillomavirus E6 protein with the clathrin adaptor complex AP-1. J Virol 72:476.; Mazzuchelli-de-Souza et al., 2013Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Ruiz R, Melo T, Araldi R, Carvalho E, Thompson C, Sircili M, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Expression and in silico analysis of the recombinant bovine papillomavirus E6 protein as a model for viral oncoproteins studies. Biomed Res Int 2013:421398.), without enzymatic activity (Tan et al., 2012aTan M, White E, Sowa M, Harper J, Aster J and Howley P (2012a) Cutaneous β-human papillomavirus E6 proteins bind Mastermind-like coactivators and repress Notch signaling. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 109:E1473-E1480.). The E6 oncoprotein is characterized by the presence of a class I PDZ domain (PSD-95/Dlg/ZO-1), which is located in the C-terminal, and four PVs conserved motifs (Cys-X-X-Cys) (Chen et al., 1997Chen J, Hong Y and Androphy E (1997) Mutational analysis of transcriptional activation by the bovine papillomavirus type 1 E6. Virology 236:30-36.; Tong et al., 1998Tong X, Boll W, Kirchhausen T and Peter M (1998) Interaction of the bovine papillomavirus E6 protein with the clathrin adaptor complex AP-1. J Virol 72:476.; Nominé et al., 2006Nominé Y, Masson M, Charbonnier S, Zanier K, Ristriani T, Deryckère F, Sibler A, Desplancq D, Atkinson R, Weiss E, et al. (2006) Structural and functional analysis of E6 oncoprotein: Insights in the molecular pathways of human papillomavirus-mediated pathogenesis. Mol Cell 21:665-678.; Boon et al., 2015Boon S, Tomaic V, Thomas M, Roberts S and Banks L (2015) Cancer-causing human papillomavirus E6 proteins display major differences in the phospho-regulation of their PDZ interactions. J Virol 89:1579-1586.). The PDZ domain is found in BPV (Mischo et al., 2013Mischo A, Ohlenschläger O, Hortschansky P, Ramachandran R and Görlach M (2013) Structural insights into a wildtype domain of the oncoprotein E6 and its interaction with a PDZ domain. PLoS One 8:e6284.) and high-risk HPVs (Boon et al., 2015Boon S, Tomaic V, Thomas M, Roberts S and Banks L (2015) Cancer-causing human papillomavirus E6 proteins display major differences in the phospho-regulation of their PDZ interactions. J Virol 89:1579-1586.) and can interact with different proteins, promoting loss of intercellular contact and cell polarity (Boon et al., 2015Boon S, Tomaic V, Thomas M, Roberts S and Banks L (2015) Cancer-causing human papillomavirus E6 proteins display major differences in the phospho-regulation of their PDZ interactions. J Virol 89:1579-1586.).

The HPV E6 oncoprotein can form a trimeric complex with E6AP ubiquitin ligase and p53 (Zanier et al., 2005Zanier K, Charbonnier S, Baltzinger M, Nominé Y, Altschuh D and Travé G (2005) Kinetic analysis of the interactions of human papillomavirus E6 oncoproteins with the ubiquitin ligase E6AP using surface plasmon resonance. J Mol Biol 349:401-412., 2007Zanier K, Nominé Y, Charbonnier S, Ruhlmann C, Schultz P, Schweizer J and Travé G (2007) Formation of well-defined soluble aggregates upon fusion to MBP is a generic property of E6 proteins from various human papillomavirus species. Protein Expr Purif 51:59-70.; Tan et al., 2012aTan M, White E, Sowa M, Harper J, Aster J and Howley P (2012a) Cutaneous β-human papillomavirus E6 proteins bind Mastermind-like coactivators and repress Notch signaling. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 109:E1473-E1480.). This complex is responsible for the proteolytic degradation of p53 (Zanier et al., 2005Zanier K, Charbonnier S, Baltzinger M, Nominé Y, Altschuh D and Travé G (2005) Kinetic analysis of the interactions of human papillomavirus E6 oncoproteins with the ubiquitin ligase E6AP using surface plasmon resonance. J Mol Biol 349:401-412.; Liu and Baleja, 2008Liu Y and Baleja J (2008) Structure and function of the papillomavirus E6 protein and its interacting proteins. Front Biosci 1:121-134.), which directs the p53 to 26S proteasome (Cai et al., 2013Cai Q, Lv L, Shao Q, Li X and Dian A (2013) Human papillomavirus early proteins and apoptosis. Arch Gynecol Obstet 287:541-548.). The HPV-5 and 8 as well as BPV E6 oncoprotein interact with the CBP/p300 complex (Werness et al., 1990Werness B, Levine A and Howley P (1990) Association of human papillomavirus types 16 and 18 E6 proteins with p5. Science 248:76-79.; Zimmermann et al., 2000Zimmermann H, Koh C, Degenkolbe R, O’Connor M, Muller A, Steger G, Chen J, Lui Y, Androphy E and Bernard H (2000) Interaction with CBP/p300 enables the bovine papillomavirus type 1 E6 oncoprotein to downregulate CBP/p300-mediated transactivation by p53. J Gen Virol 81:2617-2623.; Liu et al., 2005Liu Y, Liu Z, Gao H, Zhou Y, Androphy E and Chen J (2005) Opposing effects of bovine papillomavirus type 1 E6 and E7 genes on Fas-mediated apoptosis. Oncogene 24:3942-3953.), promoting p53 downregulation (Zimmermann et al., 1999Zimmermann H, Degenkolbe R, Bernard H and O’Connor M (1999) The human papillomavirus type 16 E6 oncoprotein can down-regulate p53 activity by targeting the transcriptional coactivator CBP/p300. J Virol 73:6209.). The loss of p53 contributes to genomic instability verified in cells infected by PVs (Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.), as well as in cells treated with BPV-1 E6 recombinant oncoprotein (Araldi et al., 2015aAraldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Modolo D, Souza E, Melo T, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Rocha M, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, et al. (2015a) Mutagenic potential of Bos taurus papillomavirus type 1 E6 recombinant protein: First description. Biomed Res Int 2015:1-15.).

The overexpression of p53 represents a threat to viral replication (Shamanna et al., 2013Shamanna R, Hoque M, Pe'ery T and Mathews M (2013) Induction of p53, p21 and apoptosis by silencing the NF90/NF45 complex in human papilloma virus-transformed cervical carcinoma cells. Oncogene 32:5176-5185.). For this reason, different oncogenic viruses express proteins able to promote p53 deregulation. Among these proteins are antigen T of SV40, adenovirus E1B, hepatitis B virus (HBV) HBx and PVs E6 (Shamanna et al., 2013Shamanna R, Hoque M, Pe'ery T and Mathews M (2013) Induction of p53, p21 and apoptosis by silencing the NF90/NF45 complex in human papilloma virus-transformed cervical carcinoma cells. Oncogene 32:5176-5185.; Cuninghame et al., 2014Cuninghame S, Jackson R and Zehbe I (2014) Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 and its role in viral carcinogenesis. Virology 456-457:370-383.). Thus, p53 deregulation is a characteristic shared by oncogenic viruses.

The E6 protein can interact with paxillin (Turner, 2000Turner C (2000) Paxillin interactions. J Cell Sci 113:4139-4140.; Zanier et al., 2005Zanier K, Charbonnier S, Baltzinger M, Nominé Y, Altschuh D and Travé G (2005) Kinetic analysis of the interactions of human papillomavirus E6 oncoproteins with the ubiquitin ligase E6AP using surface plasmon resonance. J Mol Biol 349:401-412.) and AP-1 gamma subunit clathrin adapter (Tong et al., 1998Tong X, Boll W, Kirchhausen T and Peter M (1998) Interaction of the bovine papillomavirus E6 protein with the clathrin adaptor complex AP-1. J Virol 72:476.). These interactions can lead to cytoskeleton alterations, affecting the vesicular traffic. E6 can also interact with fibulin 1, contributing to invasiveness phenotype (Moody and Laimins, 2010Moody C and Laimins L (2010) Human papillomavirus oncoproteins: Pathways to transformation. Nat Rev Cancer 10:550-560.).

Studies have also demonstrated that E6 oncoprotein can induce cell transformation (Liu et al., 2002Liu Z, Liu Y, Hong Y, Rapp L, Androphy E and Chen J (2002) Bovine papillomavirus type 1 E6-induced sensitization to apoptosis is distinct from its transforming activity. Virology 295:230-237.) and immortalization (Boon et al., 2015Boon S, Tomaic V, Thomas M, Roberts S and Banks L (2015) Cancer-causing human papillomavirus E6 proteins display major differences in the phospho-regulation of their PDZ interactions. J Virol 89:1579-1586.) due to the up-regulation of telomerases (Cuninghame et al., 2014Cuninghame S, Jackson R and Zehbe I (2014) Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 and its role in viral carcinogenesis. Virology 456-457:370-383.). This occurs because E6 promotes FOXM1 overexpression, resulting in cyclin B1, D1 and cdc25 expression and, therefore, cell proliferation (Chen and Lee, 2015Chen P and Lee H (2015) FOXM1 induced by E6 oncoprotein promotes tumor invasion and chemoresistance in HPV-infected lung cancer. Cancer Cell Microenviron 2:6-9.). In addition, E6 is able to bind to LXXL motif of MAML1 transcriptional regulator, inhibiting the Notch signaling (Tan et al., 2012aTan M, White E, Sowa M, Harper J, Aster J and Howley P (2012a) Cutaneous β-human papillomavirus E6 proteins bind Mastermind-like coactivators and repress Notch signaling. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 109:E1473-E1480.; White and Howley, 2013White E and Howley P (2013) Proteomic approaches to the study of papillomavirus - host interactions. Virology 435:57-69.). The E6 oncoprotein of both HPV and BPV also promotes energy metabolic deregulation, contributing to cell transformation (Araldi et al., 2016Araldi R, Módolo D, De-Sá-Júnior P, Consonni S, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2016) Genetics and metabolic deregulation following cancer initiation: A world to explore. Biomed Pharmacother 82:449-458.).

E6 inhibits the SSB repair system, leading to genomic instability. This occurs because the oncoprotein interacts with XRCC1 and O6-methylguanosine-DNA-methyltransferase protein, which is recruited during the SSB repair (Wallace and Galloway, 2014Wallace N and Galloway D (2014) Manipulation of cellular DNA damage repair machinery facilitates propagation of human papillomaviruses. Semin Cancer Biol 26:30-42.). E6 also leads to cytogenetic damages (Wallace and Galloway, 2014Wallace N and Galloway D (2014) Manipulation of cellular DNA damage repair machinery facilitates propagation of human papillomaviruses. Semin Cancer Biol 26:30-42.) and stimulates neosis (Araldi et al., 2015aAraldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Modolo D, Souza E, Melo T, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Rocha M, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, et al. (2015a) Mutagenic potential of Bos taurus papillomavirus type 1 E6 recombinant protein: First description. Biomed Res Int 2015:1-15.).

E7 oncoprotein

The E7 oncoprotein has 127 amino acids (Borzacchiello, 2007Borzacchiello G (2007) Bovine papillomavirus infections in animals. Commun Curr Res Educ Top Trends Appl Microbiol 673-679.), and is able to bind to LXCXE conserved motif of pRb tumor suppressor protein (Moody and Laimins, 2010Moody C and Laimins L (2010) Human papillomavirus oncoproteins: Pathways to transformation. Nat Rev Cancer 10:550-560.; White and Howley, 2013White E and Howley P (2013) Proteomic approaches to the study of papillomavirus - host interactions. Virology 435:57-69.). This binding results in pRb phosphorylation, leading to E2F factor translocation to the nucleus (Longo, 2013Longo D (2013) Biologia celular e angiogênese do câncer. In: Longo D, Fauci A, Kasper D, Hauser S, Jameson J and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18a ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 672-688.). The E2F factor recruits different chromatin modifiers, including histone deacetylases (HDAC) (Moody and Laimins, 2010Moody C and Laimins L (2010) Human papillomavirus oncoproteins: Pathways to transformation. Nat Rev Cancer 10:550-560.). Thus, the E7 oncoprotein induces the constitutive expression of E2F-responsive genes, such as cyclin A and E (Moody and Laimins, 2010Moody C and Laimins L (2010) Human papillomavirus oncoproteins: Pathways to transformation. Nat Rev Cancer 10:550-560.), leading to S and G2/M cell cycle phase increase (Sacco et al., 2003Sacco A, Siepi F and Crescenzi M (2003) HPV E7 expression in skeletal muscle cells distinguishes initiation of the postmitotic state from its maintenance. Oncogene 22:4027-4034.; Ferraro et al., 2011Ferraro C, Canedo M, Oliveira S, Carvalho M and Dias E (2011) Infecção oral pelo HPV e lesões epiteliais proliferativas associadas. J Bras Patol Médica e Lab 47:451-459.). The interaction between viral oncoproteins and pRb is not exclusive of PVs, being also observed with adenovirus E1A and antigen T of SV40 (White et al., 2015White E, Kramer R, Hwang J, Pores F, Naetar N, Hahn W, Roberts T, Schaffhausen B, Livingston D and Howley P (2015) Papillomavirus E7 oncoproteins share functions with polyomavirus small T antigens. J Virol 89:2857-2865.).

Studies have demonstrated that E7 induces DNA breaks, contributing to cell cycle deregulation (Park et al., 2014Park J, Nickel K, Torres A, Lee D, Lambert P and Kimple R (2014) Human papillomavirus type 16 E7 oncoprotein causes a delay in repair of DNA damage. Radiother Oncol 113:337-344.; Araldi 2015Araldi R (2015) Bovine papillomavirus: What We Know and What We Should Know. Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany, 124 p.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.). In addition, the E7 oncoprotein increases the Sirt1 deacetylase expression levels, modulating γ-H2AX activity (Park et al., 2014Park J, Nickel K, Torres A, Lee D, Lambert P and Kimple R (2014) Human papillomavirus type 16 E7 oncoprotein causes a delay in repair of DNA damage. Radiother Oncol 113:337-344.), a protein that participates in DSB repair (Sedelnikova and Pilch, 2003Sedelnikova O and Pilch D (2003) Histone H2AX in DNA damage and repair. Cancer Biol Ther 2:233-235.; Chowdhury et al., 2005Chowdhury D, Keogh M, Ishii H, Peterson C, Buratowski S and Lieberman J (2005) gamma-H2AX dephosphorylation by protein phosphatase 2A facilitates DNA double-strand break repair. Mol Cell 20:801-809.). Thus, the E7 oncoprotein inhibits DSB repair, resulting in genomic instability.

Bovine papillomavirus (BPV): first reports and questions

In 1986 in an intriguing paper by Campo and Jarret (1986)Campo M and Jarret WF (1986) Papillomavirus infection in cattle: Viral and chemical cofactors in naturally occurring and experimentally induced tumours. Ciba Found Symp 120:117-135. reported the description of six different BPV types (BPV-1 to BPV-6) classified into two subgroups: subgroup A, that promotes fibropapillomas, and subgroup B, which leads to true epithelial papillomas. The report also showed that the BPV-4, a member of subgroup B, was the etiological agent of papillomas of the upper digestive tract, which could become carcinomas in animals feeding on a specific bracken fern pasture (Pteridium aquilinum). Later, Walter-Moura et al. (1988)Walter-Moura J, Stocco-dos-Santos R, Dagli M, D’Angelino J, Birgel E and Beçak W (1988) Chromosome aberrations in cattle raised on bracken fern pasture. Experientia 44:785-88. verified the increase of chromosome aberrations in cells obtained from short term peripheral lymphocytes collected from bovines afflicted with bovine enzootic hematuria (BHE) that were exposed to pastures with bracken fern. These studies were reinforced by following reports, demonstrating that carcinogenesis is associated to the interaction between BPV and carcinogens present in the fern, such as quercetin and ptaquilosides (Pennie and Campo, 1992Pennie W and Campo M (1992) Synergism between bovine papillomavirus type 4 and the flavanoid quercetin in cell transformation in vitro. Virology 190:19-24.; Shahin et al., 1999Shahin M, Smith B and Prakash A (1999) Bracken carcinogens in the human diet. Mutat Res - Genet Toxicol Environ Mutagen 443:69-79.; Potter and Baird, 2000Potter D and Baird M (2000) Carcinogenic effects of ptaquiloside in bracken fern and related compounds. Br J Cancer 83:914-920.; Beniston et al., 2001Beniston RG, Morgan IM, O’Brien V and Campo MS (2001) Quercetin, E7 and p53 in papillomavirus oncogenic cell transformation. Carcinogenesis 22:1069-1076.; Leal et al., 2003Leal A, Ferraz O, Carvalho C, Freitas A, Beniston R, Beçak W, Campo M and Stocco dos Santos R (2003) Quercetin induces structural chromosomal aberrations and uncommon rearrangements in bovine cells transformed by the E7 protein of bovine papillomavirus type 4. Vet Comp Oncol 1:15-21.; Lioi et al., 2004Lioi MB, Barbieri R, Borzacchiello G, Dezzi S, Roperto S, Santoro A, Russo V and Roperto F (2004) Chromosome aberrations in cattle with chronic enzootic haematuria. J Comp Pathol 131:233-236.). These studies brought new questions to be answered: how can the co-factor act in synergism with the virus? Why can these effects be detected in peripheral blood, considering that the virus is epithelial? Or, could the effect on chromosomes be only related to bracken fern compounds?

BPV and bovine papillomatosis (BP)

BPV is a cosmopolitan virus, worldwide distributed, independently of the level of expertise on livestock exploration (He et al., 2014He Z, Meng Q, Qiao J, Peng Y, Xie K, Liu Y, Cai X, Zhang J and Chen C (2014) Mixed nipple infections caused by variant of BPV3 and a putative new subtype of BPV in cattle. Transbound Emerg Dis 63:e140-143.). It is estimated that 60% of Brazilian cattle herd is infected by BPV (Stocco dos Santos, et al., 1998Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135.). However, that rate can be higher, once virus infection can be asymptomatic (Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.; Silva et al., 2013aSilva MAR, De Albuquerque BMF, Pontes NE, Coutinho LCA, Leitão MCG, Reis MC, Castro RS and Freitas AC (2013a) Detection and expression of bovine papillomavirus in blood of healthy and papillomatosis-affected cattle. Genet Mol Res 12:3150-3156.). Furthermore, the absence of epidemiological studies about BPV distribution could underestimate the real percentage of infected animals, representing a notorious difficulty in attempting to develop vaccines, once we do not know the prevalent virus types in each country.

BPV infection is endemic in both dairy and beef cattle breeding (Claus et al., 2009Claus M, Lunardi M, Alfieri A, Sartori D, Fungaro H and Alfieri A (2009) Identification of the recently described new type of bovine papillomavirus (BPV-8) in a Brazilian beef cattle herd. Pesqui Veterinária Bras 29:25-28.; Araldi, 2015Araldi R (2015) Bovine papillomavirus: What We Know and What We Should Know. Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany, 124 p.,; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.). However, BPV presents a predilection for dairy cattle (Araldi, 2015Araldi R (2015) Bovine papillomavirus: What We Know and What We Should Know. Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany, 124 p.). The virus is the causal agent of bovine papillomatosis (BP) (Muro et al., 2008Muro L, Botteira C and Piccinin A (2008) Papilomatose bovina. Rev Cient Eletr Med Vet 10.), an infectious, contagious and neoplastic disease, characterized by the presence of multiple benign tumors (papillomas) (Figure 2) that can regress spontaneously or progress to malignant neoplasms (Campo, 2002Campo M (2002) Animal models of papilloma virus pathogenesis. Virus Res 89:249-261.; Turk et al., 2005Turk N, Zupancic Z, Staresina V, Kovac S, Babic T, Kreszinger M, Curic S, Barbic L and Milas Z (2005) Severe bovine papillomatosis?: Detection of bovine papillomavirus in tumour tissue and efficacy of treatment using autogenous vaccine and parammunity inducer. Vet Arh 75:391-397.; Yaguiu et al., 2006Yaguiu A, Carvalho C, Freitas A, Gustavo L, Góes B, Dagli L, Birgel-Júnior E, Beçak W and Stocco dos Santos R (2006) Papillomatosis in cattle: In situ detection of bovine papillomavirus DNA sequences in reproductive tissues. Brazi J Morphol Sci 23:525-529.; Borzacchiello and Roperto, 2008Borzacchiello G and Roperto F (2008) Bovine papillomaviruses, papillomas and cancer in cattle. Vet Res 39:45.; Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.; Bocaneti et al., 2014Bocaneti F, Altamura G, Corteggio A, Velescu E, Roperto F and Borzacchiello G (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: New insights into an old disease. Transbound Emerg Dis 63:1-10.). Although BP affects preferably young cattle, the disease can occur at all ages (Börkü et al., 2007Börkü M, Atalay O, Kibar M, Cam Y and Atasever A (2007) Ivermectin is an effective treatment for bovine cutaneous papillomatosis. Res Vet Sci Sci 83:360-363.). The persistence of papillomas can lead to feeding and breathing difficulties, requiring the animal's euthanasia (Campo, 2002Campo M (2002) Animal models of papilloma virus pathogenesis. Virus Res 89:249-261.). Moreover, BP decreases growth rate and induces weight loss (Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.). The disease also predisposes bovines to opportunist bacterial infections (Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.), mainly in breast and mammary glands, which can result in mastitis, causing pain, reducing milk production (Campo, 2002Campo M (2002) Animal models of papilloma virus pathogenesis. Virus Res 89:249-261.; Muro et al., 2008Muro L, Botteira C and Piccinin A (2008) Papilomatose bovina. Rev Cient Eletr Med Vet 10.; Lindsey et al., 2009Lindsey C, Almeida M, Vicari C, Carvalho C, Yaguiu A, Freitas A, Beçak W and Stocco R (2009) Bovine papillomavirus DNA in milk, blood, urine, semen, and spermatozoa of bovine papillomavirus-infected animals. Genet Mol Res 8:310-318.; Santos et al., 2014Santos E, Silva M, Pontes N, Coutinho L, Paiva S, Castro R and Freitas A (2014) Detection of different bovine papillomavirus types and co-infection in bloodstream of cattle. Transbound Emerg Dis 63:e103-e108.) and causing depreciation of leather value (Monteiro et al., 2008Monteiro V, Coelho M, Carneiro A, Silva R, Teixeira M, Wanderley A, Wanderley E and Franco E (2008) Descrição clínica e histopatológica da papilomatose cutânea bovina (BPV). Ciênc Anim Bras 10:550-560.).

Figure 2
Adult bovine (Simmental breed) with bovine papillomatosis (BP): skin papillomas on face (A), dewlap (B) and back (C).

Cutaneous papillomas are proliferative benign tumors, with complex pathogenesis (Börkü et al., 2007Börkü M, Atalay O, Kibar M, Cam Y and Atasever A (2007) Ivermectin is an effective treatment for bovine cutaneous papillomatosis. Res Vet Sci Sci 83:360-363.). These neoplasms commonly arise in vascularized areas exposed to physical attrition (Özsoy et al., 2011Özsoy S, Özyildiz Z and Güzel M (2011) Clinical, pathological and immunohistochemical findings of bovine cutaneous papillomatosis. Ankara Üniv Vet Fak Derg 58:161-165.). Histologically, papillomas are characterized by epithelium hyperplasia, showing an enlargement of interpapillary ridge that extend above dermis (Monteiro et al., 2008Monteiro V, Coelho M, Carneiro A, Silva R, Teixeira M, Wanderley A, Wanderley E and Franco E (2008) Descrição clínica e histopatológica da papilomatose cutânea bovina (BPV). Ciênc Anim Bras 10:550-560.). Morphologically, they are classified in: (1) typical - exophytic masses, with “cauliflower” aspect, presenting a wide or narrow insertion base, (2) pedunculated - exophytic masses connected by a narrow base with a peduncle shape, (3) atypical or flat - dense and flat exophytic masses entirely connected with the tissue, (4) filamentous - exophytic masses with highly keratinized surface and a thin base, present in mammary glands and (5) rice-form - small papillomas with rice-like shape (Monteiro et al., 2008Monteiro V, Coelho M, Carneiro A, Silva R, Teixeira M, Wanderley A, Wanderley E and Franco E (2008) Descrição clínica e histopatológica da papilomatose cutânea bovina (BPV). Ciênc Anim Bras 10:550-560.).

Currently, 15 types of BPV are described (Munday et al., 2015Munday J, Thomson N, Dunowska M, Knight C, Laurie R and Hills S (2015) Genomic characterisation of the feline sarcoid-associated papillomavirus and proposed classification as Bos taurus papillomavirus type 14. Vet Microbiol 177:289-295.), and classified in four genera: Deltapapillomavirus (BPV-1, 2, 13 and 14), Epsilonpapillomavirus (BPV-5 and 8), Xipapillomavirus (BPV-3, 4, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 15) and Dyoxipapillomavirus (BPV-7) (Melo et al., 2014Melo T, Carvalho R, Mazzucchelli-de-Souza J, Diniz N, Vasconcelos S, Assaf S, Araldi R, Ruiz R, Kerkis I, Beçak W, et al. (2014) Phylogenetic classification and clinical aspects of a new putative Deltapapillomavirus associated with skin lesions in cattle. Genet Mol Res 13:2458-2469.; Grindatto et al., 2015Grindatto A, Ferraro G, Varello K, Crescio M, Miceli I, Bozzetta E, Goria M and Nappi R (2015) Molecular and histological characterization of bovine papillomavirus in North West Italy. Vet Microbiol 180:113-117.; Munday et al., 2015Munday J, Thomson N, Dunowska M, Knight C, Laurie R and Hills S (2015) Genomic characterisation of the feline sarcoid-associated papillomavirus and proposed classification as Bos taurus papillomavirus type 14. Vet Microbiol 177:289-295.; Silva et al., 2016Silva F, Cibulski S, Daudt C, Weber M, Guimarães L, Streck A, Mayer F, Riehe P and Canal C (2016) Novel bovine papillomavirus type discovered by rolling-circle amplification coupled with next-generation sequencing. PLoS One 11:e0162345.). Delta and Epsilonpapillomavirus are associated with both papillomas and fibropapillomas, while Xipapillomavirus, only to squamous papillomas (Tomita et al., 2007Tomita Y, Ogawa T, Jin Z and Shirasawa H (2007) Genus specific features of bovine papillomavirus E6, E7, E5 and E8 proteins. Virus Res 124:231-236.; Yuan et al., 2007Yuan Z, Gallagher A, Gault EA, Campo MS and Nasir L (2007) Bovine papillomavirus infection in equine sarcoids and in bovine bladder cancers. Vet J 174:599-604.; Tan et al., 2012bTan M, Yildirim Y, Mahmut S, Dagalp S, Yilmaz V, Kirmizigul A and Gokce E (2012b) A histopathological, immunohistochemical and molecular study of cutaneous bovine papillomatosis. Kafkas Univ Vet Derg 18:739-744.; Araldi, 2015Araldi R (2015) Bovine papillomavirus: What We Know and What We Should Know. Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany, 124 p.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.).

Although there is no epidemiological study that allows the definition of BPV distribution, BPV-1 and 2 seem to be the most frequently identified virus types (Pathania et al., 2012Pathania S, Dhama K, Saikumar G, Shahi S and Somvanshi R (2012) Detection and quantification of bovine papilloma virus type 2 (BPV-2) by real-time PCR in urine and urinary bladder lesions in enzootic bovine haematuria (EBH)-affected cows. Transboud Emerg Dis 59(1): 79-84.; Melo et al., 2014Melo T, Carvalho R, Mazzucchelli-de-Souza J, Diniz N, Vasconcelos S, Assaf S, Araldi R, Ruiz R, Kerkis I, Beçak W, et al. (2014) Phylogenetic classification and clinical aspects of a new putative Deltapapillomavirus associated with skin lesions in cattle. Genet Mol Res 13:2458-2469.; Santos et al., 2014Santos E, Silva M, Pontes N, Coutinho L, Paiva S, Castro R and Freitas A (2014) Detection of different bovine papillomavirus types and co-infection in bloodstream of cattle. Transbound Emerg Dis 63:e103-e108.; Alcântara et al., 2015Alcântara B, Alfieri A, Headley S, Rodrigues W, Otonel R, Lunardi M and Alfieri A (2015) Molecular characterization of bovine Deltapapillomavirus (BPV-1, 2, and 13) DNA in equine sarcoids. Pesqui Veterinária Bras 35:431-436.; Araldi, 2015Araldi R (2015) Bovine papillomavirus: What We Know and What We Should Know. Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany, 124 p.; Cota et al., 2015Cota J, Peleteiro M, Petti L, Tavares L and Duarte A (2015a) Detection and quantification of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in urinary bladders and lymph nodes in cases of bovine enzootic hematuria from the endemic region of Azores. Vet Microbiol 178:138-143.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.). Moreover, these viruses are associated with both benign and malignant neoplasms (Gopalkrishna et al., 1995Gopalkrishna V, Srivastava A, Hedau S, Sharma J and Das B (1995) Detection of human papillomavirus DNA sequences in cancer of the urinary bladder by in situ hybridisation and polymerase chain reaction. Sex Transm Infect 71:231-233.; Nasir and Campo, 2008Nasir L and Campo M (2008) Bovine papillomaviruses: Their role in the aetiology of cutaneous tumours of bovids and equids. Vet Dermatol 19:243-254.; Cota et al., 2015Cota J, Peleteiro M, Petti L, Tavares L and Duarte A (2015a) Detection and quantification of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in urinary bladders and lymph nodes in cases of bovine enzootic hematuria from the endemic region of Azores. Vet Microbiol 178:138-143.). However, the global distribution of BPV is not homogenous (Santos et al., 2014Santos E, Silva M, Pontes N, Coutinho L, Paiva S, Castro R and Freitas A (2014) Detection of different bovine papillomavirus types and co-infection in bloodstream of cattle. Transbound Emerg Dis 63:e103-e108.). BPV-1 and 2 have closely related serotypes (Shafti-Keramat et al., 2009Shafti-Keramat S, Schellenbacher C, Handisurya A, Christensen N, Reininger B, Brandt S and Kirnbauer R (2009) Bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV1) and BPV2 are closely related serotypes. Virology 393:1-6.), associated with urinary bladder malignant neoplasms (Wosiacki et al., 2005Wosiacki S, Barreiro M, Alfieri A and Alfieri A (2005) Semi-nested PCR for detection and typing of bovine Papillomavirus type 2 in urinary bladder and whole blood from cattle with enzootic haematuria. J Virol Methods 126:215-219.; Balcos et al., 2008Balcos L, Borzacchiello G, Russo V, Popescu O, Roperto S and Roperto F (2008) Association of bovine papillomavirus type-2 and urinary bladder tumours in cattle from Romania. Res Vet Sci 85:145-148.; Roperto et al., 2008Roperto S, Brun R, Paolini F, Urraro C, Russo V, Borzacchiello G, Pagnini U, Raso C, Rizzo C, Roperto F, et al. (2008) Detection of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in the peripheral blood of cattle with urinary bladder tumours: Possible biological role. J Gen Virol 89:3027-3033.; Maiolino et al., 2013Maiolino P, Ozkul A, Sepici-Dincel A, Roperto F, Yücel G, Russo V, Urraro C, Lucà R, Riccardi M, Martano M, et al. (2013) Bovine papillomavirus type 2 infection and microscopic patterns of urothelial tumors of the urinary bladder in water buffaloes. Biomed Res Int 2013:937918.; Cota et al., 2015Cota J, Peleteiro M, Petti L, Tavares L and Duarte A (2015a) Detection and quantification of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in urinary bladders and lymph nodes in cases of bovine enzootic hematuria from the endemic region of Azores. Vet Microbiol 178:138-143.). BPV-4 infection is an important cause of upper digestive tract cancer development (Tsirimonaki et al., 2003Tsirimonaki E, Neil B, Williams R and Campo M (2003) Extensive papillomatosis of the bovine upper gastrointestinal tract. J Comp Pathol 129:93-99.; Nasir and Campo, 2008Nasir L and Campo M (2008) Bovine papillomaviruses: Their role in the aetiology of cutaneous tumours of bovids and equids. Vet Dermatol 19:243-254.; Lucena et al., 2011Lucena R, Rissi D, Kommers G, Pierezan F, Oliveira-Filho J, Macêdo J, Flores M and Barros C (2011) A retrospective study of 586 tumours in Brazilian cattle. J Comp Pathol 145:20-24.). Studies also show that BPV-13 is associated to urothelial carcinomas (Roperto et al., 2015Roperto S, Russo V, Leonardi L, Martano M, Corrado F, Riccardi M and Roperto F (2015) Bovine papillomavirus type 13 expression in the urothelial bladder tumours of cattle. Transbound Emerg Dis 63(6): 628-634.).

Diagnostic methods

Studies about BPV diversity and prevalence are mandatory to develop novel therapeutic methods (Silva et al., 2013bSilva M, Batista M, Pontes N, Santos E, Coutinho L, Castro R, Blabino V and Freitas A (2013b) Comparison of two PCR strategies for the detection of bovine papillomavirus. J Virol Methods 192:55-58.), since immunity is species-specific (Claus et al., 2007Claus M, Vivian D, Lunardi M, Alfieri A and Alfieri A (2007) Análise filogenética de papilomavírus bovino associado com lesões cutâneas em rebanhos do Estado do Paraná. Pesqui Veterinária Bras 27:314-318.). Therefore, diagnosis is crucial.

Different methods have been implemented to identify PVs, such as: Southern blot (Leto et al., 2011Leto M, Santos-Júnior G, Porro A and Tomimori J (2011) Human papillomavirus infection?: Etiopathogenesis, molecular biology and clinical manifestations. An Bras Dermatol 86:306-317.), immunohistochemistry (IHC) (Elzein et al., 1991Elzein E, Sundberg J, Housawi F, Gameel A, Ramadan R and Hassanein M (1991) Genital bovine papillomavirus infection in Saudi Arabia. J Vet Diagnostic Investig 3:36-38.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.), chromogenic in situ hybridization (CISH) (Melo et al. 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.), electron microscopy (Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.) and PCR using specific and/or degenerate primers (Stocco dos Santos et al., 1998Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135.; Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7., 2014aAraldi R, Carvalho R, Melo T, Diniz N, Sant’Ana T, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Spadacci-Morena D, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014a) Bovine papillomavirus in beef cattle: First description of BPV-12 and putative type BAPV8 in Brazil. Genet Mol Res 13:5644-5653., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.; Melo et al., 2014Melo T, Carvalho R, Mazzucchelli-de-Souza J, Diniz N, Vasconcelos S, Assaf S, Araldi R, Ruiz R, Kerkis I, Beçak W, et al. (2014) Phylogenetic classification and clinical aspects of a new putative Deltapapillomavirus associated with skin lesions in cattle. Genet Mol Res 13:2458-2469.). Among these techniques, PCR is the most used due to its high sensitivity (Leto et al., 2011Leto M, Santos-Júnior G, Porro A and Tomimori J (2011) Human papillomavirus infection?: Etiopathogenesis, molecular biology and clinical manifestations. An Bras Dermatol 86:306-317.). Moreover, using the restriction fragment length polymorphism of PCR products (PCR-RFLP) allows to identify BPV type (Carvalho et al., 2013Carvalho R, Sakata S, Giovanni D, Mori E, Brandão P, Richtzenhain L, Pozzi C, Arcaro J, Miranda M, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, et al. (2013) Bovine papillomavirus in Brazil: Detection of coinfection of unusual types by a PCR-RFLP method. Biomed Res Int 2013:270898.), since this method shows a correlation of 95% with the results obtained using DNA sequencing (Martens et al., 2001aMartens A, De Moor A and Ducatelle R (2001a) PCR detection of bovine papilloma virus DNA in superficial swabs and scrapings from equine sarcoids. Vet J 161:280-286.; Carvalho et al., 2013Carvalho R, Sakata S, Giovanni D, Mori E, Brandão P, Richtzenhain L, Pozzi C, Arcaro J, Miranda M, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, et al. (2013) Bovine papillomavirus in Brazil: Detection of coinfection of unusual types by a PCR-RFLP method. Biomed Res Int 2013:270898.; Kawauchi et al., 2015Kawauchi K, Takahashi C, Ishihara R and Hatama S (2015) Development of a novel PCR-RFLP assay for improved detection and typing of bovine papillomaviruses. J Virol Methods 218:23-26.).

Although real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) allows to determine the number of viral copies, this method has the lowest reproducibility (Guo et al., 2012Guo F, Liu Y, Wang X, He Z, Weiss N, Madeleine M, Liu F, Tian X, Song Y, Pan Y, et al. (2012) Human papillomavirus infection and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma: A case-control study. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 21:780-785.). For this reason, PCR followed by DNA sequencing represents the most common method to identify and typify BPVs (Melo et al., 2014Melo T, Carvalho R, Mazzucchelli-de-Souza J, Diniz N, Vasconcelos S, Assaf S, Araldi R, Ruiz R, Kerkis I, Beçak W, et al. (2014) Phylogenetic classification and clinical aspects of a new putative Deltapapillomavirus associated with skin lesions in cattle. Genet Mol Res 13:2458-2469.; Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.). However, there is no “gold-standard” primer employed in PVs identification (Antonsson et al., 2010Antonsson A, Nancarrow D, Brown I, Green A, Drew P, Watson D, Hayward N and Whiteman D (2010) High-risk human papillomavirus in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 19:2080-2087.).

On the one hand, although the specific primers have higher sensitivity than degenerate primers, they cannot identify the 14 BPV types simultaneously (Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.). In addition, specific primers do not allow to identify novel virus types and subtypes (Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.). Moreover, evidence indicates that a specific primer for BPV-1 can anneal to BPV-2 (Haga et al., 2013Haga T, Dong J, Zhu W and Burk R (2013) The many unknown aspects of bovine papillomavirus diversity, infection and pathogenesis. Vet J 197:122-123.), once these virus types are considered serotypes-like (Shafti-Keramat et al., 2009Shafti-Keramat S, Schellenbacher C, Handisurya A, Christensen N, Reininger B, Brandt S and Kirnbauer R (2009) Bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV1) and BPV2 are closely related serotypes. Virology 393:1-6.). However, in a comparative study using complete genomes of BPV-1-6 in 2014 we demonstrated the BPV-1 primer specificity (Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.).

Among the degenerate primers described in the literature, FAP59/64 (Forslund et al., 1999Forslund O, Antonsson A, Nordin P, Stenquist B and Hansson BG (1999) A broad range of human papillomavirus types detected with a general PCR method suitable for analysis of cutaneous tumours and normal skin. J Gen Virol 80:2437-2443.) is the most employed in both BPV and HPV identification. This primer was designed based on the L1 ORF homology of HPV (Forslund et al., 1999Forslund O, Antonsson A, Nordin P, Stenquist B and Hansson BG (1999) A broad range of human papillomavirus types detected with a general PCR method suitable for analysis of cutaneous tumours and normal skin. J Gen Virol 80:2437-2443.) and later optimized to identify BPV DNA sequences (Ogawa et al., 2004Ogawa T, Tomita Y, Okada M, Shinozaki K, Kubonoya H, Kaiho I and Shirasawa H (2004) Broad-spectrum detection of papillomaviruses in bovine teat papillomas and healthy teat skin. J Gen Virol 85:2191-2197.). Furthermore, the use of FAP59/64 primer already allowed to identity novel BPV types, including BPV-9 and 10 (Hatama et al., 2008Hatama S, Nobumoto K and Kanno T (2008) Genomic and phylogenetic analysis of two novel bovine papillomaviruses, BPV-9 and BPV-10. J Gen Virol 89:158-163.). However, despite of these advantages of degenerate primers, there are several reports showing their low sensitivity. For instance, MY09/11, another degenerate primer frequently used in HPV diagnosis, was unable to identify BPV and HPV sequences in clinical samples (Martelli-Marzagão et al., 2010Martelli-Marzagão F, Yamashiro A, Ogawa M, Santos-Júnior G, Tomimori J and Porro A (2010) Caracterização clínica e histopatológica e tipagem do papilomavírus humano das verrugas vulgares nos receptores de transplante renal. An Bras Dermatol 85:743-746.; Zhu et al., 2014Zhu X, Dong J, Uchida K, Watanabe K, Nakayama H, Goto Y and Haga T (2014) Bovine papillomavirus type 10 with a deletion associated with a lingual papilloma in a cow. Vet J 199:303-305.) or copies of complete cloned genome (Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.).

Although PCR is commonly used to identify PV DNA sequences, the method does not allow to identify their localization and physical state (episomal or integrated). Therefore, CISH represents and additional method used to demonstrate the physical state of these viruses (Black, 1968Black P (1968) The oncogenic DNA viruses: A review of in vitro transformation studies. Annu Rev Microbiol 22:391-426.; Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.; Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.). Another additional technique to identify PVs is L1 immunodetection (Nasir and Reid, 1999Nasir L and Reid S (1999) Bovine papillomaviral gene expression in equine sarcoid tumours. Virus Res 61:171-175.; Longworth and Laimins. 2004Longworth M and Laimins L (2004) Pathogenesis of human papillomaviruses in differentiating epithelia. Microbiol Mol Biol Rev 68:362-372.; Roperto et al., 2011Roperto S, Comazzi S, Ciusani E, Paolini F, Borzacchiello G, Esposito I, Luca R, Russo V, Urraro C, Venuti A, et al. (2011) PBMCs are additional sites of productive infection of bovine papillomavirus type 2. J Gen Virol 92:1787-1794.; Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.; Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.)., which not only allows identification of the viral presence, but also provides an important evidence of productive infection (Nasir and Reid, 1999Nasir L and Reid S (1999) Bovine papillomaviral gene expression in equine sarcoid tumours. Virus Res 61:171-175.; Roperto et al., 2011Roperto S, Comazzi S, Ciusani E, Paolini F, Borzacchiello G, Esposito I, Luca R, Russo V, Urraro C, Venuti A, et al. (2011) PBMCs are additional sites of productive infection of bovine papillomavirus type 2. J Gen Virol 92:1787-1794.; Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.).

Histopathological analysis of BPV-infected lesions is a differential diagnosis method, which allows to identify intra-epithelial neoplasms with oncogenic potential (Monteiro et al., 2008Monteiro V, Coelho M, Carneiro A, Silva R, Teixeira M, Wanderley A, Wanderley E and Franco E (2008) Descrição clínica e histopatológica da papilomatose cutânea bovina (BPV). Ciênc Anim Bras 10:550-560.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.).

BPV infection pathway and histopathological alterations

BPV transmission can occur by direct (animal-animal) or indirect contact with contaminated surfaces (Muro et al., 2008Muro L, Botteira C and Piccinin A (2008) Papilomatose bovina. Rev Cient Eletr Med Vet 10.; Cubie, 2013Cubie H (2013) Diseases associated with human papillomavirus infection. Virology 445:21-34.). Studies also show that the virus can be transmitted by flies (Finlay et al., 2009Finlay M, Yuan Z, Burden F, Trawford A, Morgan I, Campo M and Nasir L (2009) The detection of bovine papillomavirus type 1 DNA flies. Virus Res 144:315-317.) and ticks (Muro et al., 2008Muro L, Botteira C and Piccinin A (2008) Papilomatose bovina. Rev Cient Eletr Med Vet 10.).

Studies of PV infection are based on the prototype BPV-1 (Florin et al., 2012Florin L, Sapp M and Spoden G (2012) Host-cell factors involved in papillomavirus entry. Med Microbiol Immunol 201:437-448.). According to the literature, the viral infection requires a tissue micro-injury, exposing heparin sulfate proteoglycan receptors (Ljubojevic and Skerlev, 2014Ljubojevic S and Skerlev M (2014) HPV-associated diseases. Clin Dermatol 32:227-234.; Greber, 2016Greber U (2016) Virus and host mechanics support membrane penetration and cell entry. J Virol 90: 3802-3805.), which are needed for BPV L1 anchorage (Hartl et al., 2011Hartl B, Hainisch E, Shafti-Keramat S, Kirnbauer R, Corteggio A, Borzacchiello G, Tober R, Kainzbauer C, Pratscher B and Brandt S (2011) Inoculation of young horses with bovine papillomavirus type 1 virions leads to early infection of PBMCs prior to pseudo-sarcoid formation. J Gen Virol 92:2437-2445.; Buck et al., 2013Buck C, Day P and Trus B (2013) The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1. Virology 445:169-174.)., This is confirmed by treatment with heparinase preventing viral infection (Kines et al., 2016Kines R, Cerio R, Roberts J, Thompson C, Pinos E, Lowy D and Schiller J (2016) Human papillomavirus capsides prefentially bind and infect tumor cells. Int J Cancer 138:901-911.). The micro-injury is necessary for the virus to access basal keratinocytes (Liu and Baleja, 2008Liu Y and Baleja J (2008) Structure and function of the papillomavirus E6 protein and its interacting proteins. Front Biosci 1:121-134.), where the virus cycle begins (Campo, 1997aCampo M (1997a) Bovine papillomavirus and cancer. Vet J 154:175-188.). Current studies also show that integrin α6 (CD49f) and integrin 332 (laminin 5) are targets for L1 binding (Sibbet et al., 2000Sibbet G, Romero-Graillet C, Meneguzzi G and Campo MS (2000) Alpha6 integrin is not the obligatory cell receptor for bovine papillomavirus type 4. J Gen Virol 81:327-334.; Florin et al., 2012Florin L, Sapp M and Spoden G (2012) Host-cell factors involved in papillomavirus entry. Med Microbiol Immunol 201:437-448.).

The L1 binding to heparin sulfate leads to conformational changes in capsid icosaedric structure (Buck et al., 2013Buck C, Day P and Trus B (2013) The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1. Virology 445:169-174.). This exposes the L2 N-terminal to be cleaved by furin protein, present in the cell membrane (Buck et al., 2013Buck C, Day P and Trus B (2013) The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1. Virology 445:169-174.). This cleavage induces a second capsid conformational change, allowing L2 to bind to different receptors, such as integrin α2β4 (Buck et al., 2013Buck C, Day P and Trus B (2013) The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1. Virology 445:169-174.). Next, the virions are internalized by an clathrin-dependent endocytose mechanism, resulting in cytoplasmic vesicles that associate to lysosomes (Day et al., 2003Day P, Lowy D and Schiller J (2003) Papillomaviruses infect cells via a clathrin-dependent pathway. Virology 307:1-11.). The lysosomal acid content release promotes pH alterations in capsid proteins, resulting in viral DNA release (Day et al., 2003Day P, Lowy D and Schiller J (2003) Papillomaviruses infect cells via a clathrin-dependent pathway. Virology 307:1-11.). The BPV genome is found in epissomal form (Campo, 2002Campo M (2002) Animal models of papilloma virus pathogenesis. Virus Res 89:249-261.; Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.; Cota et al., 2015Cota J, Peleteiro M, Petti L, Tavares L and Duarte A (2015a) Detection and quantification of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in urinary bladders and lymph nodes in cases of bovine enzootic hematuria from the endemic region of Azores. Vet Microbiol 178:138-143.), while HPV can integrate in fragile sites of the host genome (Monte and Peixoto, 2010Monte T and Peixoto G (2010) A incidência de papilomavírus humano em mulheres no Hospital Universitário Sul Fluminense. Rev Bras Análises Clínicas 42:131-139.; Moody and Laimins, 2010Moody C and Laimins L (2010) Human papillomavirus oncoproteins: Pathways to transformation. Nat Rev Cancer 10:550-560.; Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.). A current study based on qRT-PCR, showed that cutaneous papillomas have about 2.2104 viral copies (Cota et al., 2015Cota J, Peleteiro M, Petti L, Tavares L and Duarte A (2015a) Detection and quantification of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in urinary bladders and lymph nodes in cases of bovine enzootic hematuria from the endemic region of Azores. Vet Microbiol 178:138-143.).

PVs do not codify polymerase (Moody and Laimins, 2010Moody C and Laimins L (2010) Human papillomavirus oncoproteins: Pathways to transformation. Nat Rev Cancer 10:550-560.). For this reason, these viruses induce the S-phase entry, which was verified in BPV-infected cells (Potocki et al., 2014Potocki L, Lewinska A, Klukowska-Rötzler J, Bielak-Zmijewska A, Grabowska W, Rzeszutek I, Kaminska P, Roga E, Bugno-Poniewierska M, Slota E, et al. (2014) Sarcoid-derived fibroblasts: Links between genomic instability, energy metabolism and senescence. Biochimie 92:163-172.), in a process known as amplification (Moody and Laimins, 2010Moody C and Laimins L (2010) Human papillomavirus oncoproteins: Pathways to transformation. Nat Rev Cancer 10:550-560.). Due to the stimulation of cell proliferation, BPV induces mitotic stress (Potocki et al., 2014Potocki L, Lewinska A, Klukowska-Rötzler J, Bielak-Zmijewska A, Grabowska W, Rzeszutek I, Kaminska P, Roga E, Bugno-Poniewierska M, Slota E, et al. (2014) Sarcoid-derived fibroblasts: Links between genomic instability, energy metabolism and senescence. Biochimie 92:163-172.), resulting in cytogenetic aberrations (Stocco dos Santos et al., 1998Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135.; Melo et al., 2011Melo TC, Diniz N, Campos SRC, Ferraz OP, Lindsey CJ, Rieger TT, Beçak W and Stocco RC (2011) Cytogenetic studies in peripheral blood of bovines afflicted by papillomatosis. Vet Comp Oncol 9:269-274.; Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.; Campos et al., 2013Campos S, Melo T, Assaf S, Araldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sircili M, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Chromosome aberrations in cells infected with bovine papillomavirus: Comparing cutaneous papilloma, esophagus papilloma, and urinary bladder lesion cells. ISRN Oncol 2013:910849.). Moreover, the viral hyperproliferative action leads to the exophytic mass development as a consequence of acanthosis (Cubie, 2013Cubie H (2013) Diseases associated with human papillomavirus infection. Virology 445:21-34.; Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.). As occurs with epithelium differentiation and virus assembly, a keratinization process is verified (Ferraro et al., 2011Ferraro C, Canedo M, Oliveira S, Carvalho M and Dias E (2011) Infecção oral pelo HPV e lesões epiteliais proliferativas associadas. J Bras Patol Médica e Lab 47:451-459.). This process is histologically characterized by the increase of keratin granules in the granular layer (Ferraro et al., 2011Ferraro C, Canedo M, Oliveira S, Carvalho M and Dias E (2011) Infecção oral pelo HPV e lesões epiteliais proliferativas associadas. J Bras Patol Médica e Lab 47:451-459.; Araldi et al., 2015bAraldi R, Melo T, Neves A, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Módulo D, De-Sá-Júnio P, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Beçak W, et al. (2015b) Hyperproliferative action of bovine papillomavirus (BPV): Genetics and histopathological aspects. Genet Mol Res 14:12942-12954.).

Virus assembly is observed in the most differentiated epithelium layers (Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.), where the virion release occurs by cell degeneration (Brobst and Hinsman, 1966Brobst D and Hinsman E (1966) Electron microscopy of the bovine cutaneous papilloma. Vet Pathol 3:196-207.; Buck et al., 2013Buck C, Day P and Trus B (2013) The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1. Virology 445:169-174.). This process results in koilocyte formation. The term koilocyte comes from the Greek word koillos, which means “cavity” (Ferraro et al., 2011Ferraro C, Canedo M, Oliveira S, Carvalho M and Dias E (2011) Infecção oral pelo HPV e lesões epiteliais proliferativas associadas. J Bras Patol Médica e Lab 47:451-459.). Koilocyte formation results from the cytopathic effect of E5 and E6 oncoproteins, although the molecular mechanism that results in cell vacuolization remains unclear (Krawczyk et al., 2008Krawczyk E, Suprynowicz F, Liu X, Dai Y, Hartmann D, Hanover J and Schlegel R (2008) Koilocytosis: A cooperative interaction between the human papillomavirus. Am J Pathol 173:682-688.). However, the cytoplasmic vacuolization contributes to cell fragility and virion release (Krawczyk et al., 2008Krawczyk E, Suprynowicz F, Liu X, Dai Y, Hartmann D, Hanover J and Schlegel R (2008) Koilocytosis: A cooperative interaction between the human papillomavirus. Am J Pathol 173:682-688.; Wang and Kieff, 2013Wang F and Kieff E (2013) Virologia médica. In: Longo D, Fauci A, Kasper D, Hauser S, Jameson J and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18th ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 1432-1441.). In this sense, koilocytes are cells destined to apoptosis, which emerges as a consequence of DNA replication and macromolecule synthesis inhibition.

After viral assembly, virions are released in the corneum layer, allowing infiltration in the keratin matrix (Brobst and Hinsman, 1966Brobst D and Hinsman E (1966) Electron microscopy of the bovine cutaneous papilloma. Vet Pathol 3:196-207.; Buck et al., 2013Buck C, Day P and Trus B (2013) The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1. Virology 445:169-174.). This mechanism confers an immune evasion, since the icosaedric morphology of PVs is immunoreactive (Buck et al., 2013Buck C, Day P and Trus B (2013) The papillomavirus major capsid protein L1. Virology 445:169-174.). In addition, keratin confers physical protection for virions, as they are non-enveloped.

BPV as a model for HPV

HPV is species-specific, infecting exclusively humans (Koller and Olson, 1972Koller L and Olson C (1972) Attempted transmission of warts from man, cattle, and horses and of deer fibroma, to selected hosts. J Invest Dermatol 58:366-368.; Campo, 2002Campo M (2002) Animal models of papilloma virus pathogenesis. Virus Res 89:249-261.). This specificity was demonstrated in the 1970s, when calves, hamsters, ponies and Rhesus monkeys were inoculated with BPV and HPV virions isolated by ultracentrifugation (Koller and Olson, 1972Koller L and Olson C (1972) Attempted transmission of warts from man, cattle, and horses and of deer fibroma, to selected hosts. J Invest Dermatol 58:366-368.). However, only BPV was able to infect the species (Koller and Olson, 1972Koller L and Olson C (1972) Attempted transmission of warts from man, cattle, and horses and of deer fibroma, to selected hosts. J Invest Dermatol 58:366-368.). Due to its capability to infect different species and the pathogenic and morphological characteristics shared with HPV (Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.), BPV has been used as a prototype to study PV biology and oncology (Koller and Olson, 1972Koller L and Olson C (1972) Attempted transmission of warts from man, cattle, and horses and of deer fibroma, to selected hosts. J Invest Dermatol 58:366-368.; Campo, 2002Campo M (2002) Animal models of papilloma virus pathogenesis. Virus Res 89:249-261.; Liu et al., 2005Liu Y, Liu Z, Gao H, Zhou Y, Androphy E and Chen J (2005) Opposing effects of bovine papillomavirus type 1 E6 and E7 genes on Fas-mediated apoptosis. Oncogene 24:3942-3953.; Campo, 2006Campo M (2006) Bovine papillomavirus: Old system, new lessons? Papillomavirus research: From natural history to vaccine and beyond. Caister Academic Press, Norfolk, pp 373-387.; Costa and Medeiros, 2014Costa R and Medeiros R (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: Opening new trends for comparative pathology. Arch Virol 159:191-198.). Therefore, research involving BPV has contributed with the understanding of viral oncogenesis (Costa and Medeiros, 2014Costa R and Medeiros R (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: Opening new trends for comparative pathology. Arch Virol 159:191-198.; Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.). Based on these data, the next sections will focus on BPV and its host interaction.

Equine sarcoid: an example of cross-infection

Although considered epithelial- and mucous-tropic, some BPV types, especially Deltapapillomavirus, can infect fibroblasts causing sarcoma-like lesions, known as equine sarcoid (Chambers et al., 2003bChambers G, Ellsmore V, O’Brien P, Reid S, Love S, Campo M and Nasir L (2003b) Association of bovine papillomavirus with the equine sarcoid. J Gen Virol 84:1055-1062.; Geisshüsler et al., 2016Geisshüsler H, Marti E, Stoffel M, Kühni K, Stojiljkovic A, von Tscharner C, Vidondo B, Gerber V and Koch C (2016) Quantitative analysis of infiltrating immune cells and bovine papillomavirus type 1 E2-positive cells in equine sarcoids. Vet J 216:45-52.). Equine sarcoid was first described by Jackson (1936)Jackson C (1936) The incidence and pathology of tumours of domestic animals in South Africa. Onderstepoort J Vet Sci Anim Ind 6:378-385., being considered a biphasic neoplasia, since it affects both epidermis and dermis. Equine sarcoid is the most frequent benign skin neoplasia observed in horses that are 1-6 years old (Jackson, 1936Jackson C (1936) The incidence and pathology of tumours of domestic animals in South Africa. Onderstepoort J Vet Sci Anim Ind 6:378-385.; Otten et al., 1993Otten N, von Tscharner C, Lazary S, Antczak D and Gerber H (1993) DNA of bovine papillomavirus type 1 and 2 in equine sarcoids: PCR detection and direct sequencing. Arch Virol 132:121-131.; Nasir and Reid, 1999Nasir L and Reid S (1999) Bovine papillomaviral gene expression in equine sarcoid tumours. Virus Res 61:171-175.; Martens et al., 2000Martens A, De Moor A, Demeulemeester J and Ducatelle R (2000) Histopathological characteristics of five clinical types of equine sarcoid. Res Vet Sci 69:295-300.; Bergvall, 2013Bergvall K (2013) Sarcoids. Vet Clin Equine 29:657-671.; Mosseri et al., 2014Mosseri S, Hetzel U, Hahn S, Michaloupoulou E, Sallabank H, Knottenbelt D and Kipar A (2014) Equine sarcoid: In situ demonstration of matrix metalloproteinase expression. Vet J 202:279-285.), affecting 11.5% of all horses (Knottenbelt, 2005Knottenbelt D (2005) A suggested clinical classification for the equine sarcoid. Clin Tech Equine Pract 4:278-295.). Differently from papillomas, sarcoids rarely present a spontaneous regression (Angelos et al., 1991Angelos J, Marti E, Lazary S and Carmichael L (1991) Characterization of BPV-like DNA in equine sarcoids. Arch Virol 119:95-109.).

Equine sarcoid is an invasive but not metastatic neoplasia (Nasir and Reid, 1999Nasir L and Reid S (1999) Bovine papillomaviral gene expression in equine sarcoid tumours. Virus Res 61:171-175.), causing substantial morbidity and economic loss due to aesthetic and functional impairment (Angelos et al., 1991Angelos J, Marti E, Lazary S and Carmichael L (1991) Characterization of BPV-like DNA in equine sarcoids. Arch Virol 119:95-109.; Otten et al., 1993Otten N, von Tscharner C, Lazary S, Antczak D and Gerber H (1993) DNA of bovine papillomavirus type 1 and 2 in equine sarcoids: PCR detection and direct sequencing. Arch Virol 132:121-131.). Six different sarcoid morphotypes are known: occult, verrucous, nodular, fibroblastic, mixed and malignant (Knottenbelt, 2005Knottenbelt D (2005) A suggested clinical classification for the equine sarcoid. Clin Tech Equine Pract 4:278-295.). However, 84% of affected equines have more than one sarcoid morphotype (Goodrich et al., 1998Goodrich L, Gerber H, Marti E and Antczak D (1998) Equine sarcoids. Vet Clin North Am Equine Pract 14:607-623.).

Equine sarcoids are lesions with intense fibroblastic proliferation, in which fibroblasts are disposed in fusiform bundles or spirally organized, presenting a morphology of fibropapilloma-like (Martens et al., 2000Martens A, De Moor A, Demeulemeester J and Ducatelle R (2000) Histopathological characteristics of five clinical types of equine sarcoid. Res Vet Sci 69:295-300.). Another characteristic of this neoplasia is the presence of anaplastic and pleomorphic fibroblasts, perpendiculary orientated in relation to basal membrane, and being observed in the dermo-epidermal junction (Bogaert et al., 2010Bogaert L, Martens A, Kast W, Van Marck E and De Cock H (2010) Bovine papillomavirus DNA can be detected in keratinocytes of equine sarcoid tumors. Vet Microbiol 146:269-275.). The epidermal component is only present in verrucous and mixed sarcoids (Bogaert et al., 2010Bogaert L, Martens A, Kast W, Van Marck E and De Cock H (2010) Bovine papillomavirus DNA can be detected in keratinocytes of equine sarcoid tumors. Vet Microbiol 146:269-275.). The sarcoid invasiveness capability can be attributed to the high levels of expression of metalloproteinase. MMP1 promotes the laminin and collagen IV degradation, resulting in extracellular matrix remodeling (Mosseri et al., 2014Mosseri S, Hetzel U, Hahn S, Michaloupoulou E, Sallabank H, Knottenbelt D and Kipar A (2014) Equine sarcoid: In situ demonstration of matrix metalloproteinase expression. Vet J 202:279-285.)

Equine sarcoid has a multifactorial cause (Bergvall, 2013Bergvall K (2013) Sarcoids. Vet Clin Equine 29:657-671.). However, the Deltapapillomavirus is recognized as an etiological factor (Nasir and Reid, 1999Nasir L and Reid S (1999) Bovine papillomaviral gene expression in equine sarcoid tumours. Virus Res 61:171-175.; Chambers et al., 2003bChambers G, Ellsmore V, O’Brien P, Reid S, Love S, Campo M and Nasir L (2003b) Association of bovine papillomavirus with the equine sarcoid. J Gen Virol 84:1055-1062.; Bogaert et al., 2008bBogaert L, Martens A, Van Poucke M, Ducatelle R, De Cock H, Dewulf J, De Baere C, Peelman L and Gasthuys F (2008b) High prevalence of bovine papillomaviral DNA in the normal skin of equine sarcoid-affected and healthy horses. Vet Microbiol 129:58-68.; Bergvall, 2013Bergvall K (2013) Sarcoids. Vet Clin Equine 29:657-671.). The association between BPV and equine sarcoid was first described by Olson and Cook in 1951 (Brandt et al., 2008Brandt S, Haralambus R, Schoster A, Kirnbauer R and Stanek C (2008) Peripheral blood mononuclear cells represent a reservoir of bovine papillomavirus DNA in sarcoid-affected equines. J Gen Virol 89:1390-1395.). BPV-1 and 2 DNA sequences are identified in 100% of equine sarcoids (Martens et al., 2001aMartens A, De Moor A and Ducatelle R (2001a) PCR detection of bovine papilloma virus DNA in superficial swabs and scrapings from equine sarcoids. Vet J 161:280-286.; Gaynor et al., 2015bGaynor A, Zhu K, Cruz F, Affolter V and Pesavento P (2015b) Localization of bovine papillomavirus nucleic acid in equine sarcoids. Vet Pathol 53:567-573.). Furthermore, DNA sequences of these virus types are identified in 2/3 of asymptomatic horses (Bravo et al., 2010Bravo I, Sanjosé S and Gottschling M (2010) The clinical importance of understanding the evolution of papillomaviruses. Trends Microbiol 18:432-438.). These data demonstrate that the virus can be asymptomatic, remaining latent in epidermis and dermis (Bogaert et al., 2008bBogaert L, Martens A, Van Poucke M, Ducatelle R, De Cock H, Dewulf J, De Baere C, Peelman L and Gasthuys F (2008b) High prevalence of bovine papillomaviral DNA in the normal skin of equine sarcoid-affected and healthy horses. Vet Microbiol 129:58-68.; Brandt et al., 2008Brandt S, Haralambus R, Schoster A, Kirnbauer R and Stanek C (2008) Peripheral blood mononuclear cells represent a reservoir of bovine papillomavirus DNA in sarcoid-affected equines. J Gen Virol 89:1390-1395.; Bergvall, 2013Bergvall K (2013) Sarcoids. Vet Clin Equine 29:657-671.).

Viral latency is a characteristic shared by BPV (Bogaert et al., 2008bBogaert L, Martens A, Van Poucke M, Ducatelle R, De Cock H, Dewulf J, De Baere C, Peelman L and Gasthuys F (2008b) High prevalence of bovine papillomaviral DNA in the normal skin of equine sarcoid-affected and healthy horses. Vet Microbiol 129:58-68.; Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.; Silva et al., 2013aSilva MAR, De Albuquerque BMF, Pontes NE, Coutinho LCA, Leitão MCG, Reis MC, Castro RS and Freitas AC (2013a) Detection and expression of bovine papillomavirus in blood of healthy and papillomatosis-affected cattle. Genet Mol Res 12:3150-3156.) and HPV (Maran et al., 1995Maran A, Amella C, Dilorenzo T, Auborn K, Taichman L and Steinberg B (1995) Human papillomavirus type-11 transcripts are present at low abundance in latently infected respiratory tissue. Virology 212:285-294.; Astori et al., 1998Astori G, Lavergne D, Benton C, Hockmayr B, Egawa K, Garbe C and de Villiers E (1998) Human papillomavirus are commonly found in normal skin of immunocompetent hosts. J Invest Dermatol 110:752-55.; Forslund et al., 2004Forslund O, Lidelof B, Hrail E, Norin P, Stenquist B, Kimbauer P, Sluptzky K and Dillner J (2004) High prevalence of cutaneous human papillomavirus DNA on the top of skin tumors but not in “stripped” biopsies from the same tumors. J Invest Dermatol 123:388-394.). However, the virus infection induces DNA damages and genomic instability (Stocco dos Santos, et al., 1998Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135.; Melo et al., 2011Melo TC, Diniz N, Campos SRC, Ferraz OP, Lindsey CJ, Rieger TT, Beçak W and Stocco RC (2011) Cytogenetic studies in peripheral blood of bovines afflicted by papillomatosis. Vet Comp Oncol 9:269-274.; Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.; Campos et al., 2013Campos S, Melo T, Assaf S, Araldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sircili M, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Chromosome aberrations in cells infected with bovine papillomavirus: Comparing cutaneous papilloma, esophagus papilloma, and urinary bladder lesion cells. ISRN Oncol 2013:910849.; Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.). Moreover, studies show that 70% of BPV-infected asymptomatic horses live in contact with cattle (Bergvall, 2013Bergvall K (2013) Sarcoids. Vet Clin Equine 29:657-671.). However, although the presence of BPV-1 L1 transcripts was already verified in equine sarcoids by RT-PCR (Nasir and Reid, 1999Nasir L and Reid S (1999) Bovine papillomaviral gene expression in equine sarcoid tumours. Virus Res 61:171-175.), these neoplasias are considered abortive infection sites, since virion presence was not described. (Bogaert et al., 2008bBogaert L, Martens A, Van Poucke M, Ducatelle R, De Cock H, Dewulf J, De Baere C, Peelman L and Gasthuys F (2008b) High prevalence of bovine papillomaviral DNA in the normal skin of equine sarcoid-affected and healthy horses. Vet Microbiol 129:58-68.; Brandt et al., 2008Brandt S, Haralambus R, Schoster A, Kirnbauer R and Stanek C (2008) Peripheral blood mononuclear cells represent a reservoir of bovine papillomavirus DNA in sarcoid-affected equines. J Gen Virol 89:1390-1395.). The absence of productive infection in equine sarcoids suggests that the BPV cross-infection is a consequence of an erratic virus cycle (Otten et al., 1993Otten N, von Tscharner C, Lazary S, Antczak D and Gerber H (1993) DNA of bovine papillomavirus type 1 and 2 in equine sarcoids: PCR detection and direct sequencing. Arch Virol 132:121-131.).

As verified in PB, sarcoids are frequently seen in sites most susceptible to traumatism (Angelos et al., 1991Angelos J, Marti E, Lazary S and Carmichael L (1991) Characterization of BPV-like DNA in equine sarcoids. Arch Virol 119:95-109.; Otten et al., 1993Otten N, von Tscharner C, Lazary S, Antczak D and Gerber H (1993) DNA of bovine papillomavirus type 1 and 2 in equine sarcoids: PCR detection and direct sequencing. Arch Virol 132:121-131.; Martens et al., 2000Martens A, De Moor A, Demeulemeester J and Ducatelle R (2000) Histopathological characteristics of five clinical types of equine sarcoid. Res Vet Sci 69:295-300.), confirming the need of tissue micro-injury for virus infection. In addition, as in bovines, it is believed that insects can contribute to BPV transmission, because BPV-1 DNA sequences were already identified in Musca automnalis, Fannia carnicularis and Stomoxys calcinatrans flies (Bergvall, 2013Bergvall K (2013) Sarcoids. Vet Clin Equine 29:657-671.).

Studies also show that the Arabic breed is the most susceptible to sarcoid development (Knottenbelt, 2005Knottenbelt D (2005) A suggested clinical classification for the equine sarcoid. Clin Tech Equine Pract 4:278-295.; Bogaert et al., 2008bBogaert L, Martens A, Van Poucke M, Ducatelle R, De Cock H, Dewulf J, De Baere C, Peelman L and Gasthuys F (2008b) High prevalence of bovine papillomaviral DNA in the normal skin of equine sarcoid-affected and healthy horses. Vet Microbiol 129:58-68.). The reason for this is the presence of W3 and B1 MHC-II haplotypes that facilitate BPV infection persistence (Chambers et al., 2003bChambers G, Ellsmore V, O’Brien P, Reid S, Love S, Campo M and Nasir L (2003b) Association of bovine papillomavirus with the equine sarcoid. J Gen Virol 84:1055-1062.; Bogaert et al., 2008bBogaert L, Martens A, Van Poucke M, Ducatelle R, De Cock H, Dewulf J, De Baere C, Peelman L and Gasthuys F (2008b) High prevalence of bovine papillomaviral DNA in the normal skin of equine sarcoid-affected and healthy horses. Vet Microbiol 129:58-68.).

Currently, treatments for sarcoid, as well as for PB, are almost inefficient (Bergvall, 2013Bergvall K (2013) Sarcoids. Vet Clin Equine 29:657-671.). Treatment methods are: (1) surgical excision of the neoplasia, with recurrence in 50-64% of the cases within six months (Lancaster et al., 1977Lancaster WD, Olson C and Meinke W (1977) Bovine papilloma virus: Presence of virus-specific DNA sequences in naturally occurring equine tumors. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 74:524-528.; Martens et al., 2001bMartens A, De Moor A, Vlaminck L, Pille F and Steenhaut M (2001b) Evaluation of excision, cryosurgery and local BCG vaccination for the treatment of equine sarcoids. Vet Rec 49:665-669.; Bergvall, 2013Bergvall K (2013) Sarcoids. Vet Clin Equine 29:657-671.; Mosseri et al., 2014Mosseri S, Hetzel U, Hahn S, Michaloupoulou E, Sallabank H, Knottenbelt D and Kipar A (2014) Equine sarcoid: In situ demonstration of matrix metalloproteinase expression. Vet J 202:279-285.), (2) laser therapy, where recurrence is 38% (Martens et al., 2001bMartens A, De Moor A, Vlaminck L, Pille F and Steenhaut M (2001b) Evaluation of excision, cryosurgery and local BCG vaccination for the treatment of equine sarcoids. Vet Rec 49:665-669.); cryotherapy, which is inefficient for lesions larger than 2 cm2 (Carr, 2009Carr E (2009) New developments in diagnosis and treatment of equine sarcoids. In: Robinson N and Sprayberry K (eds) Current Therapy in Equine Medicine. 6th ed. Sauders Elsevier, St. Louis, pp 698-705.), and chemotherapy using cisplatin or 5'-fluouracyl (5-FU), that can cause nephro and hepatotoxicity (Stewart et al., 2006Stewart A, Rush B and Davis E (2006) The efficacy of intratumoral 5-fluorouracil for the treatment of equine sarcoids. Aust Vet J 84:101-106.). The recurrence of disease is argued to be a consequence of BPV presence in the surgical margin (Martens et al., 2001aMartens A, De Moor A and Ducatelle R (2001a) PCR detection of bovine papilloma virus DNA in superficial swabs and scrapings from equine sarcoids. Vet J 161:280-286.). However, a current study showed a lack of correlation between BPV DNA in surgical margins and recurrence of equine sarcoids (Taylor et al., 2014Taylor S, Toth B, Baseler L, Charney V and Miller M (2014) Lack of correlation between papillomaviral DNA in surgical margins and recurrence of equine sarcoids. J Equine Vet Sci 34:722-725.). Meanwhile, Brandt et al. (2008)Brandt S, Haralambus R, Schoster A, Kirnbauer R and Stanek C (2008) Peripheral blood mononuclear cells represent a reservoir of bovine papillomavirus DNA in sarcoid-affected equines. J Gen Virol 89:1390-1395. identified BPV DNA sequences in peripheral blood of sarcoid-affected equines. These data suggest that, as verified in bovines (Stocco dos Santos et al., 1998Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135.; Roperto et al., 2011Roperto S, Comazzi S, Ciusani E, Paolini F, Borzacchiello G, Esposito I, Luca R, Russo V, Urraro C, Venuti A, et al. (2011) PBMCs are additional sites of productive infection of bovine papillomavirus type 2. J Gen Virol 92:1787-1794.; Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.; Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.), the peripheral blood can be argued as being a vehicle of viral dissemination.

Breaking paradigms

After the first reports (Campo and Jarret, 1986Campo M and Jarret WF (1986) Papillomavirus infection in cattle: Viral and chemical cofactors in naturally occurring and experimentally induced tumours. Ciba Found Symp 120:117-135.; Walter-Moura et al., 1988Walter-Moura J, Stocco-dos-Santos R, Dagli M, D’Angelino J, Birgel E and Beçak W (1988) Chromosome aberrations in cattle raised on bracken fern pasture. Experientia 44:785-88.), our purpose of investigation was to examine the role of peripheral blood as a potential BPV-transmitting agent. The first data came from Stocco dos Santos et al. (1998)Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135., which showed high levels of chromosomal aberrations in lymphocytes infected by BPV-2. That study also described the presence of BPV-2 DNA sequences in peripheral blood of donor and recipient animals and in the progeny of recipient animals. These results were the first evidence of vertical transmission (Freitas et al., 2003Freitas AC De, Carvalho C De, Brunner O, Birgel-Junior EH, Maria A, Paiva M, Benesi FJ, Gregory L, Beçak W and De Cassia R (2003) Viral DNA sequences in peripheral blood and vertical transmission of the virus: A discussion about BPV-1. Braz J Microbiol 34:76-78.). In this study, we verified the presence of BPV DNA sequences and DNA damages in peripheral blood samples of animals from different areas of Brazil (Diniz et al., 2009Diniz N, Melo T, Santos J, Mori E, Brandão P, Richtzenhain L, Freitas A, Beçak W, Carvalho R and Stocco R (2009) Simultaneous presence of bovine papillomavirus in blood and in short-term lymphocyte cultures from dairy cattle in Pernambuco, Brazil. Genet Mol Res 8:1474-1480.; Melo et al., 2011Melo TC, Diniz N, Campos SRC, Ferraz OP, Lindsey CJ, Rieger TT, Beçak W and Stocco RC (2011) Cytogenetic studies in peripheral blood of bovines afflicted by papillomatosis. Vet Comp Oncol 9:269-274.; Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.). In addition, we also demonstrated the presence of different BPV types in peripheral blood and cutaneous papilloma (Araldi et al., 2014aAraldi R, Carvalho R, Melo T, Diniz N, Sant’Ana T, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Spadacci-Morena D, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014a) Bovine papillomavirus in beef cattle: First description of BPV-12 and putative type BAPV8 in Brazil. Genet Mol Res 13:5644-5653.). All these data suggest a viral activity in blood cells (Stocco dos Santos et al., 1998Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135.; Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.). The presence of BPV DNA sequences in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) was also described in the literature in both bovines (Roperto et al., 2008Roperto S, Brun R, Paolini F, Urraro C, Russo V, Borzacchiello G, Pagnini U, Raso C, Rizzo C, Roperto F, et al. (2008) Detection of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in the peripheral blood of cattle with urinary bladder tumours: Possible biological role. J Gen Virol 89:3027-3033.; Silva et al., 2013aSilva MAR, De Albuquerque BMF, Pontes NE, Coutinho LCA, Leitão MCG, Reis MC, Castro RS and Freitas AC (2013a) Detection and expression of bovine papillomavirus in blood of healthy and papillomatosis-affected cattle. Genet Mol Res 12:3150-3156.) and equines (Brandt et al., 2008Brandt S, Haralambus R, Schoster A, Kirnbauer R and Stanek C (2008) Peripheral blood mononuclear cells represent a reservoir of bovine papillomavirus DNA in sarcoid-affected equines. J Gen Virol 89:1390-1395., 2011Brandt S, Schoster A, Tober R, Kainzbauer C, Burgstaller JP, Haralambus R, Steinborn R, Hinterhofer C and Stanek C (2011) Consistent detection of bovine papillomavirus in lesions, intact skin and peripheral blood mononuclear cells of horses affected by hoof canker. Equine Vet J 43:202-209.), reinforcing our results. Following studies also showed the presence of BPV transcripts and the L1 capsid protein in PBMCs, demonstrating the productive infection in blood cells (Roperto et al., 2011Roperto S, Comazzi S, Ciusani E, Paolini F, Borzacchiello G, Esposito I, Luca R, Russo V, Urraro C, Venuti A, et al. (2011) PBMCs are additional sites of productive infection of bovine papillomavirus type 2. J Gen Virol 92:1787-1794.; Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.). We also described the presence of BPV DNA sequences in different non-epithelial tissues such as spermatozoa, urine and milk (Lindsey et al., 2009Lindsey C, Almeida M, Vicari C, Carvalho C, Yaguiu A, Freitas A, Beçak W and Stocco R (2009) Bovine papillomavirus DNA in milk, blood, urine, semen, and spermatozoa of bovine papillomavirus-infected animals. Genet Mol Res 8:310-318.). These data demonstrate the need to review the natural history of papillomavirus, as currently proposed by Munday (2014)Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075..

We verified that primary culture cell lines from BPV-infected cutaneous and esophageal papilloma have chromosomal aberrations similar to those verified in peripheral blood (Campos et al., 2013Campos S, Melo T, Assaf S, Araldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sircili M, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Chromosome aberrations in cells infected with bovine papillomavirus: Comparing cutaneous papilloma, esophagus papilloma, and urinary bladder lesion cells. ISRN Oncol 2013:910849.). In addition, using BPV-4 E7 oncoprotein transformed PALF cell lines, we demonstrated the mutagenic potential of quercetin, a flavonoid found in bracken fern P. aquilinum, which is recognized as a co-factor to BPV-associated upper gastric cancer (Leal et al., 2003Leal A, Ferraz O, Carvalho C, Freitas A, Beniston R, Beçak W, Campo M and Stocco dos Santos R (2003) Quercetin induces structural chromosomal aberrations and uncommon rearrangements in bovine cells transformed by the E7 protein of bovine papillomavirus type 4. Vet Comp Oncol 1:15-21.). In a current study, we also showed that the BPV induced metabolic alteration in host cells, increasing reactive oxygen species and DNA damages (Araldi, 2016Araldi R (2016) Papillomaviruses: From mutation to metastasis. 6th Euro Virology Congress and Expo, p 4172.; Araldi et al., 2016Araldi R, Módolo D, De-Sá-Júnior P, Consonni S, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2016) Genetics and metabolic deregulation following cancer initiation: A world to explore. Biomed Pharmacother 82:449-458.). A summary of our main results is shown in Figure 3. These data suggest that BPV-infected cell lines are a useful model to study the pathogenic mechanisms that lead to cancer. Our contribution has allowed to know the BPV prevalence and distribution in Brazil (Diniz et al., 2009Diniz N, Melo T, Santos J, Mori E, Brandão P, Richtzenhain L, Freitas A, Beçak W, Carvalho R and Stocco R (2009) Simultaneous presence of bovine papillomavirus in blood and in short-term lymphocyte cultures from dairy cattle in Pernambuco, Brazil. Genet Mol Res 8:1474-1480.; Carvalho et al., 2013Carvalho R, Sakata S, Giovanni D, Mori E, Brandão P, Richtzenhain L, Pozzi C, Arcaro J, Miranda M, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, et al. (2013) Bovine papillomavirus in Brazil: Detection of coinfection of unusual types by a PCR-RFLP method. Biomed Res Int 2013:270898.; Lunardi et al., 2013Lunardi M, Alcântara B, Otonel R, Rodrigues W, Alfieri A and Alfieri A (2013) Bovine papillomavirus type 13 DNA in equine sarcoids. J Clin Microbiol 51:2167-2171.; Melo et al., 2014Melo T, Carvalho R, Mazzucchelli-de-Souza J, Diniz N, Vasconcelos S, Assaf S, Araldi R, Ruiz R, Kerkis I, Beçak W, et al. (2014) Phylogenetic classification and clinical aspects of a new putative Deltapapillomavirus associated with skin lesions in cattle. Genet Mol Res 13:2458-2469.; Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.; Cota et al., 2015Cota J, Peleteiro M, Petti L, Tavares L and Duarte A (2015a) Detection and quantification of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in urinary bladders and lymph nodes in cases of bovine enzootic hematuria from the endemic region of Azores. Vet Microbiol 178:138-143.; Gaynor et al., 2015aGaynor A, Fish S, Duerr R, Cruz F and Pesavento P (2015a) Identification of a novel papillomavirus in a Northern Fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis) with viral production in cartilage. Vet Pathol 52:553-561.; Grindatto et al., 2015Grindatto A, Ferraro G, Varello K, Crescio M, Miceli I, Bozzetta E, Goria M and Nappi R (2015) Molecular and histological characterization of bovine papillomavirus in North West Italy. Vet Microbiol 180:113-117.; Dong et al., 2016Dong J, Zhu W and Haga T (2016) Papillomavirus in yaks: The isolates of bovine papillomavirus type 1 have a high possibility of belonging to novel type. J Vet Med Sci 78:1059-1061.; Martano et al., 2016Martano M, Corteggio A, Restucci B, Biase M, Borzacchiello G and Maiolino P (2016) Extracellular matrix remodeling in equine sarcoid: An immunohistochemical and molecular study. BMC Vet Res 12:e24.). These studies showed that the co-infection of at least two BPV types is frequent (Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7., 2014aAraldi R, Carvalho R, Melo T, Diniz N, Sant’Ana T, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Spadacci-Morena D, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014a) Bovine papillomavirus in beef cattle: First description of BPV-12 and putative type BAPV8 in Brazil. Genet Mol Res 13:5644-5653.; Carvalho et al., 2013Carvalho R, Sakata S, Giovanni D, Mori E, Brandão P, Richtzenhain L, Pozzi C, Arcaro J, Miranda M, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, et al. (2013) Bovine papillomavirus in Brazil: Detection of coinfection of unusual types by a PCR-RFLP method. Biomed Res Int 2013:270898.), demonstrating the importance to develop multivalent vaccines.

Figure 3
Evidences of BPV presence in peripheral blood and cell culture showing: A) amplicon of BPV identified using specific primers for BPV-1, 2 and 4 (Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.); B) BPV genome identification by chromogenic in situ hybridization (Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.); C) BPV virions identified in cytoplasmic vesicles of PBMCs (Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.); D) Immunodetection of BPV L1 and E2 in lymphocytes (Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.); E) cytogenetic aberrations (breaks) observed in BPV-infected lymphocyte (Stocco dos Santos et al., 1998Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135.), F) class 2 nucleoids observed in BPV-infected lymphocytes (Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.); G) BPV DNA sequences identified in cell culture, using FAP59/64 degenerate primers; H) Immunodetection of BPV early proteins (E1^E4, E2, E7) in both oesophageal and urinary bladder carcinoma cell line (Melo et al., data not published); I) BPV virion, with 55 nm, in cytoplasmic vesicle of cutaneous papilloma cell line, total magnification of 60000X (Melo et al., data not published); J) bovine epithelial cell line (CRIB) treated with E6 recombinant oncoprotein showing micronucleus presence (Araldi et al., 2015aAraldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Modolo D, Souza E, Melo T, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Rocha M, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, et al. (2015a) Mutagenic potential of Bos taurus papillomavirus type 1 E6 recombinant protein: First description. Biomed Res Int 2015:1-15.); K) cytogenetic aberration observed in BPV-infected cell line (Campos et al., 2013Campos S, Melo T, Assaf S, Araldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sircili M, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Chromosome aberrations in cells infected with bovine papillomavirus: Comparing cutaneous papilloma, esophagus papilloma, and urinary bladder lesion cells. ISRN Oncol 2013:910849.); L) class 2 nucleoids observed in cutaneous papilloma cell line (Araldi et al., data not published).

BPV-associated malignant neoplasms

Urinary bladder carcinoma

Urinary bladder carcinoma represents 0.01% of all bovine cancers (Roperto et al., 2015Roperto S, Russo V, Leonardi L, Martano M, Corrado F, Riccardi M and Roperto F (2015) Bovine papillomavirus type 13 expression in the urothelial bladder tumours of cattle. Transbound Emerg Dis 63(6): 628-634.). It is estimated that urinary bladder cancer has caused economic losses of € 4 million between 2000-2006 in the Azores (Costa and Medeiros, 2014Costa R and Medeiros R (2014) Bovine papillomavirus: Opening new trends for comparative pathology. Arch Virol 159:191-198.).

The etiopathogenic role of BPV in urinary bladder carcinoma was first described in 1955 in Brazil and South Africa (Plowrigh, 1955Plowrigh W (1955) Malignant neoplasia of the oesophagus and rumen of cattle in Kenya. J Comp Pathol 65:108-114.). Currently, the BPV promoter action in urothelial carcinoma is well established. This is because sequences of BPV-1, 2, 13 and 14, as well as the expression of E5 oncoprotein are detected in this neoplasms (Wosiacki et al., 2006Wosiacki S, Claus M, Alfieri A and Alfieri A (2006) Bovine papillomavirus type 2 detection in the urinary bladder of cattle with chronic enzootic haematuria. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz 101:635-638.; Balcos et al., 2008Balcos L, Borzacchiello G, Russo V, Popescu O, Roperto S and Roperto F (2008) Association of bovine papillomavirus type-2 and urinary bladder tumours in cattle from Romania. Res Vet Sci 85:145-148.; Roperto et al., 2016Roperto S, Munday J, Corrado F, Goria M and Roperto F (2016) Detection of bovine papillomavirus type 14 DNA sequences in urinary bladder tumors in cattle. Vet Microbiol 190:1-4.; Russo et al., 2016Russo V, Roperto F, Esposito I, Ceccarelli D, Zizzo N, Leonardi L, Capparelli R, Borzacchiello G and Roperto S (2016) ERas protein is overexpressed and binds to the activated platelet-derived growth factor β receptor in bovine urothelial tumour cells associated with papillomavirus infection. Vet J 212:44-47.).

Urinary bladder carcinoma is clinically characterized by bovine enzootic hematuria (BHE) (Wosiacki et al., 2002Wosiacki S, Carlos A, Alfieri A and Alfieri A (2002) Bovine papillomavirus type 2 in enzootic haematuria aetiology. Semin Ciênc Agr 1:121-130.), which is verified in more than 90% of cattle with urinary bladder cancer (Resendes et al., 2011Resendes A, Roperto S, Trapani F, Urraro C, Rodrigues A, Roperto F and Borzacchiello G (2011) Association of bovine papillomavirus type 2 (BPV-2) and urinary bladder tumours in cattle from the Azores archipelago. Res Vet Sci 90:526-529.). BHE is characterized by intermittent hematuria, which can lead to anemia and weight loss (Wosiacki et al., 2002Wosiacki S, Carlos A, Alfieri A and Alfieri A (2002) Bovine papillomavirus type 2 in enzootic haematuria aetiology. Semin Ciênc Agr 1:121-130.). The disease affects preferably cattle between 3-5 years old, without breed preference (Wosiacki et al., 2002Wosiacki S, Carlos A, Alfieri A and Alfieri A (2002) Bovine papillomavirus type 2 in enzootic haematuria aetiology. Semin Ciênc Agr 1:121-130.). BHE is associated to dietary intake of carcinogenic compounds present in P. aquilinum, P. esculetum, P. revolution, Chelanthes seiberi, Encephalartos hildebrandti, Ranunaelus montana, R. acris, Climatis vitalbi (Wosiacki et al., 2002Wosiacki S, Carlos A, Alfieri A and Alfieri A (2002) Bovine papillomavirus type 2 in enzootic haematuria aetiology. Semin Ciênc Agr 1:121-130.). Among these species, P. aquilinum stands out for its wide biogeographical distribution (Oliveira, 2012Oliveira R (2012) Studies on the Biopathological Actions of Pteridium aquilinum. Universidade do Porto, Porto, 150 p.). Bracken fern is commonly observed in the South of Brazil, where there is a high incidence of BEH (Dias et al., 2012Dias J, Ignacchiti M, Giuriato P, Nunes L and Pereira-Júnior O (2012) Detecção do papilomavírus bovino tipo 2 em bexigas de bovinos com hematúria enzoótica pela técnica de reaçao em cadeia de polimerase no Sul do Espirito Santo, Brasil. Rev Bras Med Veterinária 34:146-151.).

P. aquilinum presents high levels of immunosuppressor and carcinogenic compounds, including quercetin, ptaquilosides and shikimic acid (Shahin et al., 1999Shahin M, Smith B and Prakash A (1999) Bracken carcinogens in the human diet. Mutat Res - Genet Toxicol Environ Mutagen 443:69-79.; Beniston et al., 2001Beniston RG, Morgan IM, O’Brien V and Campo MS (2001) Quercetin, E7 and p53 in papillomavirus oncogenic cell transformation. Carcinogenesis 22:1069-1076.; Bonadies et al., 2004Bonadies F, Borzacchiello G, Dezzi S, Nicoletti R and Roperto S (2004) Mass spectrometric analysis of ptaquiloside, the toxic sesquiterpene from bracken fern. Rapid Commun Mass Spectometry 18:825-828.). The immunosuppressor activity of these metabolites contributes to BPV infection persistence and represents an additional source of DNA mutation (Leal et al., 2003Leal A, Ferraz O, Carvalho C, Freitas A, Beniston R, Beçak W, Campo M and Stocco dos Santos R (2003) Quercetin induces structural chromosomal aberrations and uncommon rearrangements in bovine cells transformed by the E7 protein of bovine papillomavirus type 4. Vet Comp Oncol 1:15-21.). According to Tokarnia et al. (2000)Tokarnia C, Doberreiner J and Peixoto P (2000) Plantas de ação radiomimética. In: Tokarnia C, Doberreiner J and Peixoto P (eds) Plantas Tóxicas do Brasil. Helianthus, Rio de Janeiro, pp 178-187., the diary intake of 10 kg of Pteridum ssp. in a year can lead to BEH. Moreover, the consumption of this bracken fern can result in urinary bladder and esophageal carcinoma (Masuda et al., 2011Masuda E, Kommers G, Rosa F, Barros C, Fighera R and Piazer J (2011) Relação entre a linfopenia e a persistência da papilomatose alimentar em bovinos intoxicados crônica e espontaneamente por samambaia (Pteridium aquilinum). Pesqui Vet Bras 31:383-388.).

Therefore, BPV-1 and 2 are considered important cofactors for BEH development (Campo, 1997aCampo M (1997a) Bovine papillomavirus and cancer. Vet J 154:175-188.; Roperto et al., 2005Roperto S, Ambrosio V, Borzacchiello G, Galati P, Paciello O, Russo V and Roperto F (2005) Bovine papillomavirus type-2 (BPV-2) infection and expression of uroplakin IIIb, a novel urothelial cell marker, in urinary bladder tumors of cows. Vet Pathol 42:812-818.; Pavelski et al., 2014Pavelski M, Ollhoff R, Barros-Filho I, Deconto I, Biondo A and Dornbusch P (2014) Evaluation of urine dipstick and cystoscopy in bovine enzootic haematuria. Semin Ciênc Agr 35:1369.), once BPV leads to epidermal and dermal hyperproliferation at the same time that it induces DNA damages, contributing to cancer initiation (Stocco dos Santos et al., 1998Stocco dos Santos RC, Lindsey CJ, Ferraz OP, Pinto JR, Mirandola RS, Benesi FJ, Birgel EH, Pereira CA and Beçak W (1998) Bovine papillomavirus transmission and chromosomal aberrations: An experimental model. J Gen Virol 79:2127-2135.; Araldi et al., 2013Araldi R, Melo T, Diniz N, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Bovine papillomavirus clastogenic effect analyzed in comet assay. Biomed Res Int 2013:1-7.; Campos et al., 2013Campos S, Melo T, Assaf S, Araldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sircili M, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Chromosome aberrations in cells infected with bovine papillomavirus: Comparing cutaneous papilloma, esophagus papilloma, and urinary bladder lesion cells. ISRN Oncol 2013:910849.).

Esophageal carcinoma (EC)

While the association between HPV and EC remains under discussion despite all evidences (Antonsson et al., 2016Antonsson A, Knight L and Whiteman D (2016) Human papillomavirus not detected in esophageal adenocarcinoma tumor specimens. Cancer Epidemiol 41:96-98.), the etiological role of BPV in EC is well established (Borzacchiello et al., 2003Borzacchiello G, Ambrosio V, Roperto S, Poggiali F, Tsirimonakis E, Venuti A, Campo M and Roperto F (2003) Bovine papillomavirus type 4 in oesophageal papillomas of cattle from the South of Italy. J Comp Pathol 128:203-206.). EC in cattle is a self-limiting disease, being directly associated to BPV-4 infection (Borzacchiello et al., 2003Borzacchiello G, Ambrosio V, Roperto S, Poggiali F, Tsirimonakis E, Venuti A, Campo M and Roperto F (2003) Bovine papillomavirus type 4 in oesophageal papillomas of cattle from the South of Italy. J Comp Pathol 128:203-206.; Masuda et al., 2011Masuda E, Kommers G, Rosa F, Barros C, Fighera R and Piazer J (2011) Relação entre a linfopenia e a persistência da papilomatose alimentar em bovinos intoxicados crônica e espontaneamente por samambaia (Pteridium aquilinum). Pesqui Vet Bras 31:383-388.).

Although there is no report about BPV transmission in humans, a study performed in Germany showed a high incidence of warts in veterinarians that had contact with bovines (Bosse and Christophers, 1964Bosse K and Christophers E (1964) Beitrag zur Epidemiologie der Warzen. Hautarzt 15:80.). Another study in Central Asia discussed the association between milk consumption and EC (Nasrollahzadeh et al., 2015Nasrollahzadeh D, Ye W, Shakeri R, Sotoudeh M, Merat S, Kamangar F, Abnet C, Islami F, Boffetta P, Dawsey S, et al. (2015) Contact with ruminants is associated with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma risk. Int J Cancer 136:1468-1474.). Considering that BPV DNA sequences were already detected in milk (Lindsey et al., 2009Lindsey C, Almeida M, Vicari C, Carvalho C, Yaguiu A, Freitas A, Beçak W and Stocco R (2009) Bovine papillomavirus DNA in milk, blood, urine, semen, and spermatozoa of bovine papillomavirus-infected animals. Genet Mol Res 8:310-318.) and the thermal resistance of viral capsid (Módolo et al., data not published), it seems that the virus can survive to pasteurization process (zur Hausen, 2012zur Hausen H (2012) Red meat consumption and cancer?: reasons to suspect involvement of bovine infectious factors in colorectal cancer. Int J Cancer 2483:2475-2483.). Therefore, more efforts are necessary to verify this possible cross-infection.

EC is the eighth most prevalent human malignancy, being considered the sixth causa mortis for cancer globally (Antonsson et al., 2010Antonsson A, Nancarrow D, Brown I, Green A, Drew P, Watson D, Hayward N and Whiteman D (2010) High-risk human papillomavirus in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 19:2080-2087.; Herbster et al., 2012Herbster S, Ferraro C, Koff N, Rossini A, Kruel C, Andreollo N, Rapozo D, Blanco T, Faria P, Santos P, et al. (2012) HPV infection in Brazilian patients with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma: Interpopulational differences, lack of correlation with surrogate markers and clinicopathological parameters. Cancer Lett 326:52-58.). Considered the third most common gastrointestinal cancer (Felin et al., 2008Felin I, Grivicich I, Felin C, Regner A and Rocha A (2008) Expressão de p53, p16 e COX-2 em carcinoma escamoso de esôfago e associaçao histopatológica. Arq Gastroenterol 45:308-312.), EC has a high incidence in men (Bjørge et al., 1997Bjørge T, Hakulinen T, Engeland A, Jellum E, Koskel P, Lehtinen M, Luostarinen T, Paavonen J, Sapp M, Schiller J, et al. (1997) A prospective, seroepidemiological study of the role of human papillomavirus in esophageal cancer in Norway. Cancer Res 57:3989-3992.). In 2002, 462,000 novel cases of EC in the world were reported (Antonsson et al., 2010Antonsson A, Nancarrow D, Brown I, Green A, Drew P, Watson D, Hayward N and Whiteman D (2010) High-risk human papillomavirus in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 19:2080-2087.). Brazil had 10,780 novel cases of EC in 2014 and 7,636 deaths due to the disease in 2011 (INCA, 2016INCA (Instituto Nacional de Câncer) (2016) Estimativa 2016. Ministério da Saúde/Inst Nac Cancer José Alencar Gomes da Silva, Rio de Janeiro, 122 p.).; its incidence has increased in the last years (INCA, 2016INCA (Instituto Nacional de Câncer) (2016) Estimativa 2016. Ministério da Saúde/Inst Nac Cancer José Alencar Gomes da Silva, Rio de Janeiro, 122 p.). This data leads to concern, since EC has a mortality rate that is 25% higher than cervical cancer (Han et al., 1996Han C, Qiao G, Hubbert N, Li L, Sun C, Wang Y, Yan M, Xu D, Li Y, Lowy D, et al. (1996) Serologic association between human papillomavirus type 16 infection and esophageal cancer in Shaanxi Province, China. J Natl Cancer Inst 88:1467-1471.; Kahrilas and Hirano, 2013Kahrilas P and Hirano E (2013) Doenças do esôfago. In: Longo D, Kasper D, Jamenson J, Fauci A, Hauser S and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18a ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 2437-37.).

Among the clinical signs of EC in humans are progressive dysphagia, weight loss, odynophagia, anorexia, fever and retrosternal pain (Felin et al., 2008Felin I, Grivicich I, Felin C, Regner A and Rocha A (2008) Expressão de p53, p16 e COX-2 em carcinoma escamoso de esôfago e associaçao histopatológica. Arq Gastroenterol 45:308-312.; Haster and Owyang, 2013Haster W and Owyang C (2013) Abordagem do paciente com doença gastrointestinal. In: Longo D, Kasper D, Jamenson J, Fauci A, Hauser D and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18a ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 2402-2426.), which are similar to those verified in bovines (Borzacchiello et al., 2003Borzacchiello G, Ambrosio V, Roperto S, Poggiali F, Tsirimonakis E, Venuti A, Campo M and Roperto F (2003) Bovine papillomavirus type 4 in oesophageal papillomas of cattle from the South of Italy. J Comp Pathol 128:203-206.). Scarce epidemiological data about EC in cattle are available. In humans, EC has a variable incidence according to geographic area (Bjørge et al., 1997Bjørge T, Hakulinen T, Engeland A, Jellum E, Koskel P, Lehtinen M, Luostarinen T, Paavonen J, Sapp M, Schiller J, et al. (1997) A prospective, seroepidemiological study of the role of human papillomavirus in esophageal cancer in Norway. Cancer Res 57:3989-3992.; Syrjänen, 2002Syrjänen K (2002) HPV infections and oesophageal cancer. J Clin Pathol 55:721-728.; Guo et al., 2012Guo F, Liu Y, Wang X, He Z, Weiss N, Madeleine M, Liu F, Tian X, Song Y, Pan Y, et al. (2012) Human papillomavirus infection and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma: A case-control study. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 21:780-785.; Nasrollahzadeh et al., 2015Nasrollahzadeh D, Ye W, Shakeri R, Sotoudeh M, Merat S, Kamangar F, Abnet C, Islami F, Boffetta P, Dawsey S, et al. (2015) Contact with ruminants is associated with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma risk. Int J Cancer 136:1468-1474.; Antonsson et al., 2016Antonsson A, Knight L and Whiteman D (2016) Human papillomavirus not detected in esophageal adenocarcinoma tumor specimens. Cancer Epidemiol 41:96-98.). Among countries with high EC incidence are China, Singapore, Iran, South Africa and Brazil (Bey et al., 1976Bey E, Alexander J, Whitcutt J, Hunt J and Gear J (1976) Carcinoma of the esophagus in Africans: Establishment of a continuously growing cell line from a tumor specimen. In Vitro 12:107-114.; Han et al., 1996Han C, Qiao G, Hubbert N, Li L, Sun C, Wang Y, Yan M, Xu D, Li Y, Lowy D, et al. (1996) Serologic association between human papillomavirus type 16 infection and esophageal cancer in Shaanxi Province, China. J Natl Cancer Inst 88:1467-1471.; Syrjänen, 2002Syrjänen K (2002) HPV infections and oesophageal cancer. J Clin Pathol 55:721-728.; Guo et al., 2012Guo F, Liu Y, Wang X, He Z, Weiss N, Madeleine M, Liu F, Tian X, Song Y, Pan Y, et al. (2012) Human papillomavirus infection and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma: A case-control study. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 21:780-785.). Due to the high number of EC cases in Central Asia (100/100,000) in relation to North America and Western Europe (5-10/100,000), the region is known as the Asian Esophageal Cancer Belt (Nasrollahzadeh et al., 2015Nasrollahzadeh D, Ye W, Shakeri R, Sotoudeh M, Merat S, Kamangar F, Abnet C, Islami F, Boffetta P, Dawsey S, et al. (2015) Contact with ruminants is associated with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma risk. Int J Cancer 136:1468-1474.). Although the reason for EC incidence variation is unknown (Syrjänen, 2002Syrjänen K (2002) HPV infections and oesophageal cancer. J Clin Pathol 55:721-728.; Nasrollahzadeh et al., 2015Nasrollahzadeh D, Ye W, Shakeri R, Sotoudeh M, Merat S, Kamangar F, Abnet C, Islami F, Boffetta P, Dawsey S, et al. (2015) Contact with ruminants is associated with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma risk. Int J Cancer 136:1468-1474.), studies indicate the contribution of environmental factors, in addition to infectious agents, in the oncogenic process (Chang et al., 1992Chang F, Syrjanen S, Wang L and Syrjanen K (1992) Infectious agents in the etiology of esophageal cancer. Gastroenterology 103:1336-1348.; Antonsson et al., 2010Antonsson A, Nancarrow D, Brown I, Green A, Drew P, Watson D, Hayward N and Whiteman D (2010) High-risk human papillomavirus in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 19:2080-2087.).

Smoking and alcohol consumption are pointed out as etiological factors for human EC (Han et al., 1996Han C, Qiao G, Hubbert N, Li L, Sun C, Wang Y, Yan M, Xu D, Li Y, Lowy D, et al. (1996) Serologic association between human papillomavirus type 16 infection and esophageal cancer in Shaanxi Province, China. J Natl Cancer Inst 88:1467-1471.; Lagergren et al., 1999Lagergren J, Wang Z, Bergstro R, Dillner J and Nyre O (1999) Human papillomavirus infection and esophageal cancer: A nationwide seroepidemiologic case-control study in Sweden. J Natl Cancer Inst 91:156-162.; Syrjänen, 2002Syrjänen K (2002) HPV infections and oesophageal cancer. J Clin Pathol 55:721-728.; Haster and Owyang, 2013Haster W and Owyang C (2013) Abordagem do paciente com doença gastrointestinal. In: Longo D, Kasper D, Jamenson J, Fauci A, Hauser D and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18a ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 2402-2426.). However, due to sociocultural reasons, smoking does not justify the high incidence of EC in Central Asia (Nasrollahzadeh et al., 2015Nasrollahzadeh D, Ye W, Shakeri R, Sotoudeh M, Merat S, Kamangar F, Abnet C, Islami F, Boffetta P, Dawsey S, et al. (2015) Contact with ruminants is associated with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma risk. Int J Cancer 136:1468-1474.), reinforcing the contribution of infectious agent in esophageal carcinogenesis, and evidence shows the etiopathogenic contribution of different infectious agents in EC, such as cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), herpes simplex and HPV (Syrjänen, 2002Syrjänen K (2002) HPV infections and oesophageal cancer. J Clin Pathol 55:721-728.).

Although the association between HPV and pre-malignant cervical lesions is known since the 1970s (Syrjänen, 2002Syrjänen K (2002) HPV infections and oesophageal cancer. J Clin Pathol 55:721-728.), the participation of this virus in EC had its history marked by controversial reports in the literature (Lavergne and de Villiers, 1999Lavergne D and de Villiers E (1999) Papillomavirus in esophageal papillomas and carcinomas. Int J Cancer 80:681-684.). The association between HPV and EC was first proposed by Syrjänen (1982)Syrjänen K (1982) Histological changes identical to those condylomatous lesions found in esophageal squamous cell carcinomas. Arch Geschwulstforsch 52:283-294.. On the one hand, HPV protein expression was observed in samples by IHC (Winkler et al., 1985Winkler B, Capo V, Reumann W, Ma A, La Porta R, Reilly S, Green P, Richart R and Crum C (1985) Human papillomavirus infection of the esophagus. A clinicopathologic study with demonstration of papillomavirus antigen by the lmmunoperoxidase technique. Cancer 55:149-155.; Hille et al., 1986Hille J, Margolius K, Markowitz S and Isaacson C (1986) Human papillomavirus infection related to oesophageal carcinoma in black South Africans. South Africa Med J 69:417-420.; Kulski et al., 1986Kulski J, Demeter T, Sterrett G and KB S (1986) Human papilloma virus DNA in oesophageal carcinoma. Lancet 2:683-684.) and viral DNA sequences were identified by CISH in EC (Chang et al., 1993Chang F, Syrjanen S, Shen Q, Wang L and Syrjanen K (1993) Screening for human papillomavirus infections in esophageal squamous cell carcinomas by in situ hybridization. Cancer 72:2525-2530.; Togawa et al., 1994Togawa K, Jaskiewicz K, Takahashi H, Meltzer S and Rustgi A (1994) Human papillomavirus DNA in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Gastroenterology 107:128-136.; Cooper et al., 1995Cooper K, Taylor L and Govind S (1995) Human papillomavirus DNA in oesophageal carcinomas in South Africa. J Pathol 175:273-277.),. On the other hand, serological studies contested these results (Dillner et al., 1995Dillner J, Knekt P, Schiller J and Hakulinen T (1995) Prospective seroepidemiological evidence that human papillomavirus type 16 infection is a risk factor for oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma. BMJ 311:1346.; Han et al., 1996Han C, Qiao G, Hubbert N, Li L, Sun C, Wang Y, Yan M, Xu D, Li Y, Lowy D, et al. (1996) Serologic association between human papillomavirus type 16 infection and esophageal cancer in Shaanxi Province, China. J Natl Cancer Inst 88:1467-1471.; Lagergren et al., 1999Lagergren J, Wang Z, Bergstro R, Dillner J and Nyre O (1999) Human papillomavirus infection and esophageal cancer: A nationwide seroepidemiologic case-control study in Sweden. J Natl Cancer Inst 91:156-162.). However, despite these controversial results, the association between HPV and EC is currently accepted, being discussed in the 18th edition of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (Kahrilas and Hirano, 2013Kahrilas P and Hirano E (2013) Doenças do esôfago. In: Longo D, Kasper D, Jamenson J, Fauci A, Hauser S and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18a ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 2437-37.). Thus, the absence of HPV detection by serological methods reflects a problem still observed nowadays: the use of antibodies against late (L1) proteins (Dillner et al., 1995Dillner J, Knekt P, Schiller J and Hakulinen T (1995) Prospective seroepidemiological evidence that human papillomavirus type 16 infection is a risk factor for oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma. BMJ 311:1346.; Lagergren et al., 1999Lagergren J, Wang Z, Bergstro R, Dillner J and Nyre O (1999) Human papillomavirus infection and esophageal cancer: A nationwide seroepidemiologic case-control study in Sweden. J Natl Cancer Inst 91:156-162.). However, considering that EC does not present an HPV productive infection, the late protein expression is not expected. This occurs because HPV presents a “hit and run” mechanism (Han et al., 1996Han C, Qiao G, Hubbert N, Li L, Sun C, Wang Y, Yan M, Xu D, Li Y, Lowy D, et al. (1996) Serologic association between human papillomavirus type 16 infection and esophageal cancer in Shaanxi Province, China. J Natl Cancer Inst 88:1467-1471.; Bjørge et al., 1997Bjørge T, Hakulinen T, Engeland A, Jellum E, Koskel P, Lehtinen M, Luostarinen T, Paavonen J, Sapp M, Schiller J, et al. (1997) A prospective, seroepidemiological study of the role of human papillomavirus in esophageal cancer in Norway. Cancer Res 57:3989-3992.).

Not only serological studies are controversial. Studies based on PCR also show a low correlation between HPV and EC, mainly in clinical samples from Australia (Antonsson et al., 2010Antonsson A, Nancarrow D, Brown I, Green A, Drew P, Watson D, Hayward N and Whiteman D (2010) High-risk human papillomavirus in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 19:2080-2087.; Antonsson et al., 2016Antonsson A, Knight L and Whiteman D (2016) Human papillomavirus not detected in esophageal adenocarcinoma tumor specimens. Cancer Epidemiol 41:96-98.). These results can be attributed to the origin of clinical samples, since Australia is not considered a high-risk area for HPV-associated EC. In addition, problems involving primer sensitivity are extensively discussed in the literature of both BPV and HPV (Lavergne and de Villiers, 1999Lavergne D and de Villiers E (1999) Papillomavirus in esophageal papillomas and carcinomas. Int J Cancer 80:681-684.; Silva et al., 2013bSilva M, Batista M, Pontes N, Santos E, Coutinho L, Castro R, Blabino V and Freitas A (2013b) Comparison of two PCR strategies for the detection of bovine papillomavirus. J Virol Methods 192:55-58.; de Villiers, 2013de Villiers E (2013) Cross-roads in the classification of papillomaviruses. Virology 445:2-10.; Araldi et al., 2014bAraldi R, Giovanni D, Melo T, Diniz N, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sant’Ana T, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco R (2014b) Bovine papillomavirus isolation by ultracentrifugation. J Virol Methods 208:119-124.). However, evidence of PVs etiopathogenic action in EC has accumulated along the last 20 years. Among these are: (1) the presence of koilocytes in EC biopsies (Bjørge et al., 1997Bjørge T, Hakulinen T, Engeland A, Jellum E, Koskel P, Lehtinen M, Luostarinen T, Paavonen J, Sapp M, Schiller J, et al. (1997) A prospective, seroepidemiological study of the role of human papillomavirus in esophageal cancer in Norway. Cancer Res 57:3989-3992.; Syrjänen, 2002Syrjänen K (2002) HPV infections and oesophageal cancer. J Clin Pathol 55:721-728.; Vieira et al., 2013Vieira C, Lopes J and Velosa J (2013) A case of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma with positive HPV 11. Gastroenterol Hepatol 36:311-315.), (2) loss or mutation in p53 as a consequence of the PV E6 oncoprotein (Chang et al., 1994Chang F, Syrjanenl S, Tervahauta A, Kurvinen K, Wang L and Syrjänen K (1994) Frequent mutations of p53 gene in oesophageal squamous cell carcinomas with and without human papiliomavirus (HPV) involvement suggest the dominant role of environmental carcinogens in oesophageal carcinogenesis. Br J Cancer 70:346-351., 1995Chang F, Syrjänen S and Syrjänen K (1995) Implications of the p53 tumor-suppressor gene in clinical oncology. J Clin Oncol 13:1009-1022.; Herbster et al., 2012Herbster S, Ferraro C, Koff N, Rossini A, Kruel C, Andreollo N, Rapozo D, Blanco T, Faria P, Santos P, et al. (2012) HPV infection in Brazilian patients with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma: Interpopulational differences, lack of correlation with surrogate markers and clinicopathological parameters. Cancer Lett 326:52-58.), (3) increase in telomerase activity (Syrjänen, 2002Syrjänen K (2002) HPV infections and oesophageal cancer. J Clin Pathol 55:721-728.), and detection of DNA sequences of HPV-6, 11, 18, 31 and 33 in EC (Vieira et al., 2013Vieira C, Lopes J and Velosa J (2013) A case of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma with positive HPV 11. Gastroenterol Hepatol 36:311-315.).

Prophylactic and therapeutic vaccines against BPV and HPV

Currently, there are few forms of treatment against BP available (Muro et al., 2008Muro L, Botteira C and Piccinin A (2008) Papilomatose bovina. Rev Cient Eletr Med Vet 10.). Among the possibilities is the papilloma surgical excision (Muro et al., 2008Muro L, Botteira C and Piccinin A (2008) Papilomatose bovina. Rev Cient Eletr Med Vet 10.). Although frequently employed, this method is inefficient in cattle with high incidence of BPV, because it is impracticable to perform the excision of papillomas of all cattle. Another strategy frequently employed is self-hemotherapy (Leto et al., 2011Leto M, Santos-Júnior G, Porro A and Tomimori J (2011) Human papillomavirus infection?: Etiopathogenesis, molecular biology and clinical manifestations. An Bras Dermatol 86:306-317.). This method consists in the removal and intramuscular reinjection of a volume of 10 mL of venous blood, inducing a nonspecific immune stimulus that can promote the “shedding of the warts” (Leto et al., 2011Leto M, Santos-Júnior G, Porro A and Tomimori J (2011) Human papillomavirus infection?: Etiopathogenesis, molecular biology and clinical manifestations. An Bras Dermatol 86:306-317.). However, this technique does not avoid BP re-occurrence, thus being a palliative method. Another possibility to reduce the incidence of BP is to control ectoparasite populations, since it was demonstrated that the biological control of ticks reduces the incidence of BPV (William et al., 1992William J, Kirubaharan J and Uthumann K (1992) Survey on incidence and complications of bovine cutaneous papillomatosis. Indian J Vet 69:842-844.).

Few medical interventions proposed in the last century can match the effects that immunization exerts on longevity (Schuchat and Jackson, 2013Schuchat A and Jackson L (2013) Princípios de imunização e uso de vacinas. In: Longo D, Fauci A, Kasper D, Hauser S, Jameson J and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18a ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 1031-1041.). For this reason, vaccination is considered the best form of prevention, control and eradication of viral etiology diseases (Ribeiro-Müller and Müller, 2014Ribeiro-Müller L and Müller M (2014) Prophylactic papillomavirus vaccines. Clin Dermatol 32:235-247.). Moreover, immunization reduces both transmission and dissemination of the infectious agent (Schuchat and Jackson, 2013Schuchat A and Jackson L (2013) Princípios de imunização e uso de vacinas. In: Longo D, Fauci A, Kasper D, Hauser S, Jameson J and Loscalzo J (eds) Medicina Interna de Harrison. 18a ed. Artmed, Porto Alegre, pp 1031-1041.).

Two prophylactic vaccines against HPV are available in the market since 2006: (1) Cervarix, produced by Glaxo-Smith Klein (GSK) and (2) Gardasil, produced by Merck (Ribeiro-Müller and Müller, 2014Ribeiro-Müller L and Müller M (2014) Prophylactic papillomavirus vaccines. Clin Dermatol 32:235-247.). These vaccines are based on virus-like particles (VLPs) of the L1 structural protein (Marigliani et al., 2012Marigliani B, Kavati EA, Sakauchi D, Oliveira H, Canali R and Sasaki A (2012) Intracellular distribution of recombinant human papillomavirus capsid proteins. Curr Micros Contrib Adv Sci Technol 678-684.). Cervarix is a bivalent vaccine able to confer protection against HPV-16 and 18, employing L1 VLPs produced in Baculovirus in Trichoplusia ni insect cells, using aluminum hydrophosphate as adjuvant (Ribeiro-Müller and Müller, 2014Ribeiro-Müller L and Müller M (2014) Prophylactic papillomavirus vaccines. Clin Dermatol 32:235-247.). Gardasil is able to confer protection against two high-risk HPV types (HPV-16 and 18) and two low-risk ones (HPV-6 and 11), associated to genital warts. This vaccine is composed by of L1 VLPs produced in Saccharomyces cerevisae, employing lipid A 3-O-diacilete-44-monophosphoryl (ASO4) as adjuvant‥ Both vaccines are considered safe and well tolerated (Ribeiro-Müller and Müller, 2014Ribeiro-Müller L and Müller M (2014) Prophylactic papillomavirus vaccines. Clin Dermatol 32:235-247.). For these reasons, more than 30 countries, including Brazil, adopted immunization programs against HPV based on these vaccines.

Australia, the first country to adopt the vaccination against HPV, observed a reduction of 70% in HPV-6, 11, 16 and 18 infection incidence. Similar results were also verified in Denmark, Finland and Sweden (Ribeiro-Müller and Müller, 2014Ribeiro-Müller L and Müller M (2014) Prophylactic papillomavirus vaccines. Clin Dermatol 32:235-247.). However, available vaccines are not able to protect against all HPV types, since there are more than 200 described. Moreover, these vaccines have a high cost of production. Thus, it is necessary to invest in novel multivalent vaccines, with lower production cost. Vaccines based on recombinant protein expressed in Escherichia coli have demonstrated to be a useful alternative, because they have a lower cost, and not requiring the L1 VLPs, they are more stable (Ribeiro-Müller and Müller, 2014Ribeiro-Müller L and Müller M (2014) Prophylactic papillomavirus vaccines. Clin Dermatol 32:235-247.).

Although there are two vaccines against HPV, there is no vaccine yet against BPV available to date. The idea of developing a vaccine to combat BPV began with the infection of Shope papillomas extract in the 1940 decade (Shope, 1937Shope R (1937) Immunization of rabbits to infectious papillomatosis. J Exp Med 65:219-231.). Since then, different vaccine models were proposed (Jarret et al., 1991Jarret W, Smith K, O’Neil B, Gaukroger J, Chandrachud L, Grindlay G, McGarvie G and Campo M (1991) Studies on vaccination against Papillomavirus: Prophylactic and therapeutic vaccination with recombinant structural proteins. Virology 184:2-42.; Gaukroger et al., 1996Gaukroger JM, Chandrachud LM, O’Neil BW, Grindlay GJ, Knowles G and Campo MS (1996) Vaccination of cattle with bovine papillomavirus type 4 L2 elicits the production of virus-neutralizing antibodies. J Gen Virol 77:1577-1583.; Góes et al., 2008Góes L, Freitas A, Ferraz O, Rieger T, Santosa J, Pereira A, Beçak W, Lindsey C and Stocco R (2008) Bovine papillomavirus type 4 L1 gene transfection in a Drosophila S2 cell expression system: Absence of L1 protein expression. Braz J Microbiol 39:1-4.; Love et al., 2012Love A, Chapman S, Matic S, Noris E, Lomonossoff G and Taliansky M (2012) In planta production of a candidate vaccine against bovine papillomavirus type 1. Planta 236:1305-1313.; Mazzuchelli-de-Souza et al., 2013Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Carvalho R, Ruiz R, Melo T, Araldi R, Carvalho E, Thompson C, Sircili M, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Expression and in silico analysis of the recombinant bovine papillomavirus E6 protein as a model for viral oncoproteins studies. Biomed Res Int 2013:421398.). However, none of them became a commercial product. This denotes the notorious difficulty to obtain a safe and efficient vaccine, and reflects the reduced number of research groups dedicated to develop a vaccine against BPV.

Studies have demonstrated that BPV early proteins (E6 and E7) show a therapeutic action, while later proteins (L1 and L2) have a prophylactic action (Campo, 1997bCampo M (1997b) Vaccination against papillomavirus in cattle. Clin Dermatol 15:275-283.). Vaccines based on E6 and E7 have also been discussed against HPV (Borysiewicz et al., 1996Borysiewicz L, Fiander A, Nimako M, Man S, Wilkinson G, Westmoreland D, Evans A, Adams M, Stacey S, Boursnell M, et al. (1996) A recombinant vaccinia virus encoding human papillomavirus types 16 and 18, E6 and E7 proteins as immunotherapy for cervical cancer. Lancet 347:1523-1527.; He et al., 2000He Z, Wlazlo A, Kowalczyk D, Cheng J, Xiang Z, Giles-Davis W and Ertl H (2000) Viral recombinant vaccines to the E6 and E7 antigens of HPV-16. Virology 270:146-161.; Yao et al., 2013Yao Y, Huang W, Yang X, Sun W, Liu X, Cun W and Ma Y (2013) HPV-16 E6 and E7 protein T cell epitopes prediction analysis based on distributions of HLA-A loci across populations: An in silico approach. Vaccine 31:2289-2294.), reinforcing the usefulness of the BPV model not only for comprehending the pathogenic mechanisms of HPV, but also for vaccine biotechnology. However, in a current study based on BPV-1 E6 recombinant oncoprotein, we demonstrated that this oncoprotein is able to induce clastogenesis and neosis per se (Araldi et al., 2015aAraldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Modolo D, Souza E, Melo T, Spadacci-Morena D, Magnelli R, Rocha M, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, et al. (2015a) Mutagenic potential of Bos taurus papillomavirus type 1 E6 recombinant protein: First description. Biomed Res Int 2015:1-15.). This data emphasizes the necessity of an in silico analysis of E6 and E7 oncoproteins, aiming to obtain novel variants that are more antigenic and less mutagenic. In order to guarantee the immunization and safety of products, our group is now focusing on the development of a prophylactic vaccine based on L1 recombinant protein (Módolo et al., data not published).

Conclusions

Papillomaviridae comprises the most extensive known family of viruses, able to infect all vertebrates including humans, in which it is responsible for 27-30% of all infectious agent-associated incident cancer cases. Moreover, PVs represent an important problem in the veterinary field, inducing papillomas in dogs, felines and cattle. Also, BPV infects equines, resulting in sarcoids. Although novel discoveries contributed to the understanding of the PVs oncogenic role, some carcinogenic mechanisms remain unknown, especially those following cancer initiation (Araldi et al., 2016Araldi R, Módolo D, De-Sá-Júnior P, Consonni S, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2016) Genetics and metabolic deregulation following cancer initiation: A world to explore. Biomed Pharmacother 82:449-458.). In addition, current studies have collected evidence of BPV productive infection in sites earlier considered as not permissive, such as PBMCs (Roperto et al., 2011Roperto S, Comazzi S, Ciusani E, Paolini F, Borzacchiello G, Esposito I, Luca R, Russo V, Urraro C, Venuti A, et al. (2011) PBMCs are additional sites of productive infection of bovine papillomavirus type 2. J Gen Virol 92:1787-1794.; Melo et al., 2015Melo T, Araldi R, Pessoa N, De-Sá-Júnior P, Carvalho R, Beçak W and Stocco (2015) Bos taurus papillomavirus activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells?: Demonstrating a productive infection. Genet Mol Res 14:16712-1627.), placenta (Roperto et al,. 2012Roperto S, Borzacchiello G, Esposito I, Riccardi M, Urraro C, Cermola M, Paciello O, Corteggio A and Tate R (2012) Productive infection of bovine papillomavirus type 2 in the placenta of pregnant cows affected with urinary bladder tumors. PLoS One 7:e33569.) and primary cell cultures (Campos et al., 2008Campos S, Trindade C, Ferraz O, Giovanni D, Lima A, Caetano HA, Carvalho R, Birgel E, Dagli M, Mori E, et al. (2008) Can established cultured papilloma cells harbor bovine papillomavirus? Genet Mol Res 7:1119-1126.; Campos et al., 2013Campos S, Melo T, Assaf S, Araldi R, Mazzuchelli-de-Souza J, Sircili M, Carvalho R, Roperto F, Beçak W and Stocco R (2013) Chromosome aberrations in cells infected with bovine papillomavirus: Comparing cutaneous papilloma, esophagus papilloma, and urinary bladder lesion cells. ISRN Oncol 2013:910849.). Similar results have also been described for HPV (Chiou et al., 2003Chiou H, Wu M, Liaw Y, Cheng Y, Wong R, Chen C and Lee H (2003) The presence of human papillomavirus type 16/18 DNA in blood circulation may act as a risk marker of lung cancer in Taiwan. Cancer 97:1558-1563.; Foresta et al., 2013Foresta C, Bertoldo A, Garolla A, Pizzol D, Mason S, Lenzi A and De Toni L (2013) Human papillomavirus proteins are found in peripheral blood and semen Cd20+ and Cd56+ cells during Hpv-16 semen infection. BMC Infectious Dis 13:e593.; Pessoa, 2014Pessoa N (2014) Estudos Sobre a Expressão do Papilomavirus Humano (HPV): Avaliação Comparativa Sobre Lesões Cervicais, Sangue Periférico e Retinoblastomas. Dissertation, Universidade de São Paulo, 140 p. Avaliable in http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/87/87131/tde-07052014-090937/pt-br.php
http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponivei...
). However, despite of these advances, the natural history of PVs remains dependent on cell differentiation, emphasizing the need to review the replication cycle of these viruses (White and Howley, 2013White E and Howley P (2013) Proteomic approaches to the study of papillomavirus - host interactions. Virology 435:57-69.; Munday, 2014Munday J (2014) Bovine and human papillomaviruses: A comparative review. Vet Pathol 51:1063-1075.). In addition, the available vaccines against HPV do not confer protection against all virus types, providing only a limited protection. The veterinary field lives a most dramatic scene, since there is no vaccine available against BPV. Over the last 30 years, our group has dedicated efforts to elucidate the pathogenic mechanisms of PVs, focusing on BPV, once the virus is considered a prototype for HPV studies. Although our contributions brought important advances, more studies are necessary to propose efficacious and safe prophylactic and therapeutic measures.

Dedication

This paper is dedicated to Dr. Maria Luiza Beçak on occasion of her 80th birthday. She and her husband were the founders of the Laboratory of Genetics of the Instituto Butantan, in 1961. They were Brazil's pioneers in introducing human and vertebrate cytogenetics and the first to use cytogenetics as an important tool in human genetic counseling. Dr. Beçak's contribution in classic and recent papers in the genetic literature is very important and remarkable.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP, process 2014/20617-5) and Fundação Butantan for the financial support.

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  • Associate Editor: Carlos F. M. Menck

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    16 Feb 2017
  • Date of issue
    Jan-Mar 2017

History

  • Received
    09 May 2016
  • Accepted
    28 Sept 2016
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