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Home > Lifestyle News > Health And Fitness News > Article > New skin cell culture technique developed to study HPV

New skin cell culture technique developed to study HPV

Updated on: 02 March,2018 07:07 PM IST  |  New York
IANS |

The new approach developed enables high infection rates of keratinocytes by HPV16, an HPV type that is particularly strongly linked with cancer, the researchers added

New skin cell culture technique developed to study HPV

skin cell culture techniqueRepresentational Picture


Researchers have developed a new cell culture strategy that promises to illuminate the mysterious early stages of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. According to the researchers, most HPV infections cause no symptoms, but certain types of HPV are associated with cervical, throat and other cancers.


HPV infects skin cells known as keratinocytes before they have fully matured, or differentiated, and are still dividing into new cells. During the final stages of differentiation, uninfected cells cease division, but HPV makes infected cells keep dividing, the researchers said.


The new approach developed enables high infection rates of keratinocytes by HPV16, an HPV type that is particularly strongly linked with cancer, the researchers added.

For the study, published in the journal PLOS, the research team took inspiration from recent reports that, before entering a keratinocyte, HPV16 binds to the extra cellular matrix -- a mesh of proteins and carbohydrates outside of the cell that performs a variety of structural and molecular functions.

They found that high infection rates could be achieved by incubating HPV16 with extra cellular matrix materials in a dish, and then seeding it with keratinocytes. The researchers then demonstrated the potential of this new approach to reveal important genetic information about early HPV infection.

They analysed RNA from infected cells at different time points to determine which HPV genes were expressed and when. They also infected cells with mutant HPV16 viruses lacking different genes, revealing which viral proteins were essential to establish infection. The researchers included Malgorzata Bienkowska-Haba, Timothy R. Keiffer among few others from the Louisiana State University in the US.

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