Research Alert
Newswise — The incidence of Human Papillomavirus (HPV)-associated oropharyngeal cancers — tumors of the back of the mouth and throat — is rising. If caught early, most of these cancers have a high survival rate, but about 20% of patients have a poor prognosis. Now, researchers from UC San Diego and their colleagues have found that HPV DNA hybridizes with human DNA genes in oropharyngeal cancer cells, forming extrachromosomal circular DNA (ecDNA) that promotes tumor growth.
EcDNA is made up of small, circular segments of DNA that form outside of chromosomes within the cell, and is frequently found in cancer cells. It has been shown to elude the immune system and drive carcinogenesis. Previous studies have demonstrated that ecDNA formed by the integration of HPV genes and human DNA is present in about 30% of HPV-positive oropharyngeal cancers. The study’s objective was to understand the molecular mechanisms by which hybrid ecDNA drives oropharyngeal cancer development.
The researchers analyzed changes to gene expression in ecDNA formed by HPV and human DNA hybridization in oropharyngeal tumor cells. The study discovered that:
- Previously unidentified HPV and human DNA enhancers that increased the expression of tumor-promoting genes in cancer cells, leading to the production of more of the virus and increasing tumor growth.
- Targeting these enhancers with CRISPR gene editing technology and with proteins that regulate gene activity reduced their expression and inhibited growth in HPV-positive oropharyngeal tumors.
The research holds promise for the treatment of HPV-positive oropharyngeal cancers in patients who have received a poor prognosis, according to  first author Takuya Nakagawa, formerly a postdoctoral researcher at UC San Diego School of Medicine, now an assistant professor in the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at Chiba University Hospital and Health and Disease Omics Center at Chiba University in Japan. Selectively targeting tumors with ecDNA-disrupting therapeutics could slow their growth while leaving normal cells intact.
“There are now multiple types of drugs that are being developed both in the laboratory and in clinical trials to specifically target cancers that rely on ecDNA to grow”, said senior author Joseph Califano, MD, professor of otolaryngology at UC San Diego School of Medicine and director of the Gleiberman Head and Neck Cancer Center at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center.
Califano’s lab is investigating which drugs work best to target ecDNA in general as well as hybrid ecDNA in particular. It is also studying other ways in which HPV virus-associated ecDNA can directly affect genes all over the human chromosome in addition to those encoded in ecDNA structures.
The was published in Nature Communications on March 26, 2025.
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