Epidemiological studies have revealed that a wild-type variant of HPV58 carrying an E7 variation, T20I/G63S (V1), is associated with a higher risk of cervical cancer. We previously reported that this increased oncogenicity could be the result of the virus’s greater ability to degrade pRB, thereby leading to an increased ability to grow in an anchorage-independent manner. In addition to this, this report further showed that this HPV variant induced activation of the AKT and K-Ras/ERK signaling pathways, thereby explaining its genuine oncogenicity in promoting cell proliferation, migration, invasion, and formation of tumors, all to a greater extent than the prototype HPV58 and other common variants.