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Human papilloma virus, or HPV, has a strange reputation.
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You might know of it as a sexually transmitted infection that causes uncomfortable warts,
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the papilloma, but you also may have heard that it can lead to a deadly form of cancer.
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Both are actually true, as is the possibility that you can have HPV and experience no symptoms whatsoever.
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HPV isn't just one virus.
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There are actually over 200 strains, and the different types of HPV can result in different
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outcomes (which we'll get into a little bit later).
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But first, before HPV can do anything, it has to find a way into your skin.
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Hi, I'm Dr. Moscicki from the University of California Los Angeles, Department of Pediatrics.
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I'm chief of adolescent and young adult medicine, and I have been studying HPV for over 30 years now.
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So when you're looking at skin, you have several layers, and you have the very basal cell layer,
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that is, the layer that sits right on top of the basement membrane, and right under
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that is what we call the dermis.
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and on top of that, you have the spinous, and eventually, you get the very top cornified cell layers.
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HPV first attaches itself to the basement membrane, by entering the body through a wound or micro-abrasion.
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It usually does this through sexual intercourse, but there are other types of HPV that cause
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hand and foot warts that aren't sexually transmitted.
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Reaching the basement layer is key because there is a receptor there that it must attach to first.
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It's referred to as a heparan sulfate receptor.
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This receptor actually changes the virus so that it can then attach to the basal cells.
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Once it does this, it injects its DNA into the cell's nucleus.
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As the basal cells matures, the infected cell makes its way to the very top.
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...it kind of hijacks the cell.
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And what it does is it makes it start proliferating a lot so that it can replicate itself.
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This all happens without your body mounting a real defense against the disease, because
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HPV avoids expressing genes that would initiate an immune response until later in its lifecycle.
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it looks like it's a mechanism that HPV has developed in order for its own survival.
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But, while HPV has found a clever way to avoid the immune system, the body can still get rid of the infection.
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Like, you know, when you're taking a shower, that top layer of skin kind of comes off.
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...once it gets sloughed off, if there's no other place to invade, then that infection's
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just gonna burn out very quickly.
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That it was a one-time chance that it found access to the basement membrane.
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In fact, even though 80% of people in the United States are thought to contract HPV,
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90% of infections are cleared on their own.
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So, if the infection doesn't usually last, whats t'he big deal?
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Well, that's where those different types of HPV become really important, specifically
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the ones that can cause cancer.
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There's only about 13 types that we have associated with cancer, and they all fall into the alpha types.
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The most famous ones are type 16 and 18.
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They're actually responsible for around 70% of cervical cancers.
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Types 16 and 18 are totally different from the types of HPV that cause warts, which aren't
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pleasant but fortunately do not typically become cancerous.
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What we believe, the way it causes cancer, is that it infects, probably, a stem cell within the basal cell layer.
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Therefore, those stem cells, as it maturates, what happens is, literally, HPV hijacks the
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host cell machinery, says, I want you to replicate, because every time you don't stop me, I can
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make more and more of my DNA.
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While replicating in stem cells, these oncovirus types of HPV will express the genes called E6 and E7.
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These oncoproteins stop the body from killing and clearing out cells with damaged DNA, allowing
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the cancerous cells to continue replicating.
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So when there's a damaged cell, it's a race.
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Their immune system is probably trying its best, but it's really pushing the system,
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that it's replicating way faster than the immune system can even access it.
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Fortunately, we have ways to prevent HPV from getting to this point.
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First, there are screenings for cervical cancer that can catch the disease when it is still pre-cancerous.
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But there is an unfortunate lack of screening methods for the other cancers caused by HPV.
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For people who are young enough and have not been exposed to HPV, there is also a very
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effective vaccine has been available since 2006.
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And while some people might think it's only given to girls because of the risk of cervical cancer,
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It's recommended for boys as well.
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So the prevention here, we're talking about anal cancer, penile cancers, and oropharyngeal cancers.
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So it's equally as important for boys to get this vaccine as it is for girls.