Oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) is a type of head and neck cancer and ~70% cases of OPC are associated with high-risk (hr) human papillomaviruses (HPV) infection. OPC cancers are increasing in prevalence especially in persons living with HIV (PWH) and this group also has higher rates on HPV associated OPC. Reasons for these findings are not well understood. While antiretroviral treatment (ART) does diminish HIV replication and immune activation, in a large majority of PWH it is generally started in chronic infection, when HIV reservoirs have already been established and uncontrolled HIV replication has resulted in significant immune dysfunction. Based on our preliminary data and what is known in the literature, we hypothesize that ongoing HIV replication and the resultant production of its proteins upregulates oncogenic HPV proteins (E6 and E7) thereby enhancing the probability of OPC development. HIV replication also results in exhaustion of CD8 T cells which is further exacerbated by increased HPV replication making HPV-specific CD8 T cells especially prone to overstimulation and exhaustion. These dysfunctional CD8 T cells thus make it even more likely for OPC to occur in PWH. Furthermore, both HIV protein production and immune activation continue after potent ART is started. As such, production of HIV proteins from previously latently infected CD4 T cells continues to drive HPV oncogenic protein production as well as CD8 T cell exhaustion and OPC continues to occur at higher rates in these PWH. Solidifying this overall hypothesis as proposed in our 3 aims would provide comprehensive insights into the mechanisms of OPC in PWH leading to improved prevention and therapies. Our overall study hypothesis is that chronic inflammation despite ART in PWH favors both persistence and proliferation of hrHPV16 infected oropharyngeal epithelial cells and contributes to impaired anti-HPV specific T cell immunity leading to initiation of OPC. We will test this hypothesis in the following three aims: In aim 1, we will determine the HPV types present in OPC from PWH and how T cell mediated anti-tumor immunity is impaired. We will examine whether multiple HPV subtypes persist. In addition, we will determine whether tumor and CD8 are spatially distant and whether the intra-tumoral CD8 are exhausted. Our aim 2 will determine how an HIV infection influences HPV infection, its gene expression and DNA replication to facilitate oncogenic transformation of oropharyngeal epithelial cells. Using 3D based models, we will show that HIV infection via its specific proteins (Tat and/or envelope gp120) modulates HPV pathogenesis by interfering at one or more steps in its life cycle. In aim 3, we will determine the mechanisms of HPV specific CD8 T cell dysfunction in PWH with OPC and whether tumor specific immunity can be restored. Our successfully completed studies will show how chronic, albeit low grade inflammation in PWH on ART is beneficial to the initiation of HPV associated O...