Detection of aflatoxin B1 adducts in Mexican women with cervical lesions
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Cervical cancer (CC) is one of the most serious threats to the lives of women; co-factors in addition to oncogenic human papillomavirus (HPV) infection may be important in causing CC. Women in Mexico are exposed to dietary aflatoxin B1, a potent carcinogen, which may act as a co-factor, in inducing progression to CC. Scarce studies are addressing environmental risks associated with the development of CC, thus the study aimed to establish a relationship between the presence of AFB1 and the detection of human papillomavirus in the genome of Mexican women. Forty samples from cervical tissue of women infected with HPV were obtained; positive results regarding the HPV type (16 and/or 18) were found in 92.5%25 women and the presence of AFB1-DNA adducts were detected in 77.5%25 of the same positive HPV samples. Detection of AFB1-DNA adducts and genomic concentrations were correlated with the detection of two oncogenic types of HPV 16 and 18. AFB1-DNA positivity and higher genomic concentrations of AFB1-DNA adducts were correlated with an increased risk of oncogenic detection of HPV in cervical samples from women in Mexico. As a secondary objective, a hypothetical interaction of the adducts with the NRF2 pathway has been proposed, therefore activation of p62 and in turn E6 and E7 (HPV proteins) would inhibit the formation of autophagosomes, which would result in a presence or recurrence of CC. © 2021 Wageningen Academic Publishers.
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Aflatoxins; Cervical cancer; Diet; Human papillomavirus aflatoxin B1; protein E6; protein E7; sequestosome 1; transcription factor Nrf2; adult; Article; clinical article; controlled study; dietary exposure; DNA adduct; female; human; Human papillomavirus type 16; Human papillomavirus type 18; human tissue; Mexico; nonhuman; Nrf2 signaling; papillomavirus infection; pilot study; uterine cervix cancer; virus detection; virus genome
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