{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: HPV8-induced STAT3 activation led keratinocyte stem cell expansion in human actinic keratoses. {Author}: Morgan HJ;Olivero C;Shorning BY;Gibbs A;Phillips AL;Ananthan L;Lim AXH;Martuscelli L;Borgogna C;De Andrea M;Hufbauer M;Goodwin RG;Akgül B;Gariglio M;Patel GK; {Journal}: JCI Insight {Volume}: 0 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Jun 25 {Factor}: 9.484 {DOI}: 10.1172/jci.insight.177898 {Abstract}: Despite epidermal turnover, the skin is host to a complex array of microbes including viruses, such as the human papillomavirus (HPV), which must infect and manipulate skin keratinocyte stem cells (KSC) to survive. This crosstalk between the virome and KSC populations remains largely unknown. Here, we investigated the effect of HPV8 on KSCs using various mouse models. We observed that the HPV8 early region gene E6 specifically caused Lrig1+ hair follicle junctional zone KSC proliferation and expansion, which would facilitate viral transmission. Within Lrig1+ KSCs specifically, HPV8 E6 bound intracellular p300 to phosphorylate the STAT3 transcriptional regulatory node. This induces ΔNp63 expression, resulting in KSC expansion into the overlying epidermis. HPV8 was associated with 70% of human actinic keratoses (AK). Together these results define the "hit and run" mechanism for HPV8 in human actinic keratosis as an expansion of KSCs, which lacks melanosome protection and is thus susceptible to sun-light-induced malignant transformation.