ANTIBODIES TO HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS-16, HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS-18, HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS-58, AND HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS-6B MAJOR CAPSID PROTEINS AMONG JAPANESE FEMALES
K. Matsumoto et al., ANTIBODIES TO HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS-16, HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS-18, HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS-58, AND HUMAN-PAPILLOMAVIRUS-6B MAJOR CAPSID PROTEINS AMONG JAPANESE FEMALES, Japanese journal of cancer research, 88(4), 1997, pp. 369-375
Among genital human papillomaviruses (HPVs), the so-called high-risk (
HPV 16, 18, etc.) and intermediate-risk (HPV 58, etc.) viruses are bel
ieved to be etiologically associated with cervical cancer. To estimate
the extent of infection with common HPVs among Japanese females, we e
xamined 328 sera from healthy donors (201) and patients with cervical
intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) (22), cervical cancer (67), and condyl
oma acuminatum (CA) (38) for IgG antibodies against L1 capsid protein
by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using virus-like particles of HPV
s 16, 18, 58 and 6b (low-risk) as antigens. Antibodies recognizing con
formational epitopes were found in the sera from both the patients and
the healthy donors. The prevalences of anti-HPV 16, 18, and 58 antibo
dies in the sera from the patients with CIN (45%) and cervical cancer
(49%), and that of anti-HPV 6b in the sera from the patients with CA (
55%), were significantly higher than those in the sera from the age-ma
tched healthy donors (12%, 14%, and 23%, respectively). Anti-HPV 16 wa
s not found in some of the sera from patients with HPV 16-DNA positive
CIN or cervical cancer, suggesting that HPV infection may not always
induce production of anti-capsid antibodies or that the level of antib
odies may not always be maintained until development of CIN or cancer.
Some of the sera contained antibodies against more than one type of H
PV, suggesting that the donors had been infected with different HPVs.
The type-specific antibodies against capsid L1 protein of one type of
HPV may not be able to prevent infections with other types of HPVs.