Human Papillomavirus Genomes Associate with Active Host Chromatin during Persistent Viral Infection

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Human Papillomavirus Genomes Associate with Active Host Chromatin during Persistent Viral Infection

Authors

Warburton, A.; Markowitz, T. E.; Miranda, J. L.; Majumder, K.; McBride, A. A.

Abstract

Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) maintain their genomes as minichromosomes in the nuclei of infected keratinocytes. This study investigates the association of HPV31 genomes with host chromatin using both HiC and 4C-seq chromosome conformation capture techniques. We show that HPV31 genomes preferentially associate with transcriptionally active A compartments of host chromatin, regions of open chromatin defined by ATAC-seq, and super-enhancers defined by Brd4 and H3K27ac ChIP-seq. The viral genome association sites were also highly correlated with genomic loci previously identified as common HPV integration sites in cervical cancers. Recent studies have shown that transcriptionally active sites are prone to dsDNA breaks, and we find a strong correlation among dsBREAK datasets with transcriptionally active and open regions of host chromatin and the HPV31 genome association sites defined in our study. These findings suggest that HPV genomes associate with cellular transcriptional epicenters to maintain active viral gene expression during persistent infection, but also indicate that the susceptibility of these regions to dsDNA breaks could explain their propensity for viral DNA integration in HPV-associated cancers.

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