Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0006142 (breast cancer)
160,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The p53 locus on the short arm of chromosome 17 at 17p 13.1 was examined for loss of heterozygosity, mutation, mRNA and protein expression in 60 primary breast cancers. Allele loss around the p53 locus was detected in 19/45 informative tumours (42%). p53 mutations in the evolutionarily conserved exons 5 to 9 were detected in 17/60 (28%) by amplification mismatch and confirmed by direct DNA sequencing. p53 mRNA expression was detected by Northern blot in 36/59 (61%) of tumours, and p53 protein expression using antibody 1801 on frozen-tissue sections in 13/44 of the tumours examined. p53 mutation was significantly associated with oestrogen-receptor-poor tumours (p less than 0.01) and hence with poor prognosis, but not with other clinical or pathological parameters. There was no statistical correlation between loss of heterozygosity around the p53 locus at 17p13.1 and p53 mutation. Furthermore, p53 mutation was not associated with p53 expression detected by immunohistochemical staining with antibody 1801 or as p53 mRNA. In addition, events on 17p (allele losses, p53 mutation, p53 expression) were independent of c-erbB-2 expression. In breast cancer, by contrast with colorectal, lung and ovarian cancer, there appears to be no clear association between p53 DNA abnormalities and p53 expression.
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PMID:p53 allele losses, mutations and expression in breast cancer and their relationship to clinico-pathological parameters. 153 17

81 candidate families with a rare genetic susceptibility to cancer called Li-Fraumeni syndrome were enrolled in an International Working Group. Review of 2,261 blood relatives revealed a total of 515 family members (23%) who had at least one confirmed cancer diagnosis. The major features of the syndrome, breast cancer, sarcomas of soft tissue and bone, brain tumour, leukemia and adrenal cortical carcinoma accounted for 74% of all the cancers recorded. 64% of all malignant tumours occurred before the age of 45 years. Among females, breast cancer accounted for 43 percent of all cases. There were 22 cases of bilateral metachronous breast cancer. Excluding individuals with bilateral breast cancer, 76 patients developed a second neoplasm, the most common being osteogenic sarcoma. The present study agrees with previous reports on the epidemiological aspects of Li-Fraumeni syndrome, the genetic defect of which has recently been found to involve the tumour-suppressor gene p53.
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PMID:[Li-Fraumeni syndrome and the p53 gene]. 155 56

By screening for mutations in the p53 coding sequence by means of single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) in a series of breast tumors we detected a novel polymorphism. This change in the SSCP pattern was detected in 6.2% of the tumor DNAs analysed and implied an A to G substitution at the last base of codon 213, thus representing a neutral change. First suspecting a somatic mutation we confirmed its presence in matched sets of DNAs from normal tissues. Extending our study to a series of 60 ovarian carcinomas and 70 healthy blood donors we noticed that this polymorphism represented only 3% and 2.6% respectively. We wondered if the difference in frequency in the breast cancer population might not be related to familial breast cancer and analysed 26 DNAs from patients showing predisposition to the disease. Two patients presented this polymorphism and one corresponding kindred was analysed, revealing a mendelian mode of transmission but no correlation with the cancer phenotype.
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PMID:Nucleotide sequence polymorphism in a hotspot mutation region of the p53 gene. 156 74

The ras, Rb and p53 genes have been implicated in the development of human breast cancer. Qualitative or quantitative changes in the expression of the ras p21 may lead to cell transformation, and this has been previously demonstrated in breast cancer. Both the retinoblastoma protein (Rb1) and the p53 gene product appear to function as negative regulators of cell division. We have investigated the expression of ras p21, Rb1 and p53 proteins in human breast cancer patients immunohistochemically, and correlated the results with a range of clinical and pathological parameters. Ras p21 expression was elevated in 65 per cent and p53 in 23 per cent of cases. Rb1 was expressed in 58 per cent of breast cancer tissues and in 75 per cent of normal tissue. Only four patients were found to have loss of Rb1 expression and also overexpression of both p53 and ras gene products. No correlations were found between the expression of these three genes and menopausal status, histological types or tumour grade. However, a correlation was found between Rb1 loss of expression and tumour diameter (greater than 2 cms), and no lymph node metastasis. Also, a significantly higher number of p53 staining specimens were found to be overexpressing the ras gene. These results suggest that all three oncogenes are most likely involved in the development of breast cancer but that their role is complex.
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PMID:Expression of ras Rb1 and p53 proteins in human breast cancer. 156 85

A cDNA encoding the complete normal human p53 protein was expressed in Escherichia coli using an expression system based on the bacteriophage T7 promoter. The cDNA was adapted so that the full-length protein was produced without fusion to any other sequence. Large amounts of the protein were isolated and the purified protein used to produce very high titre polyclonal antibodies to p53. These new antibodies permit the sensitive detection of p53 and p53 complexes in ELISA and immunoblotting assays. Most importantly, they also permit the detection of p53 in archival tumour material that has been conventionally fixed in formalin and embedded in paraffin wax. Using this reagent we have found that aberrant expression of p53 is a frequent feature of human breast cancer. We are able to recognise six different classes of p53 expression pattern that may be of help in the subclassification of breast tumours.
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PMID:Analysis of p53 expression in human tumours: an antibody raised against human p53 expressed in Escherichia coli. 156 22

Recent studies have demonstrated that families with the Li-Fraumeni syndrome carry inherited point mutations of the p53 gene. In the present study 25 families with strong histories of breast cancer were screened for the presence of such mutations. Polymerase chain reaction products of exons 5-9 of the p53 gene were examined by single-stranded conformational polymorphism analysis and, in addition, exon 7 was further screened by direct sequencing. No mutations were detected in constitutive DNA by either method. These results indicate that familial breast cancer does not usually result from germline point mutations in the p53 gene.
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PMID:No evidence for germline mutations in exons 5-9 of the p53 gene in 25 breast cancer families. 157 Jan 51

Recent evidence has implicated germ-line mutations of the p53 gene as the cause of cancer susceptibility in the Li-Fraumeni syndrome, associated with the development of breast cancer and other neoplasms. Furthermore, somatic mutations of the p53 gene have been detected in a high percentage of non-familial breast cancers. We therefore sought to identify potential carriers of p53 gene mutations in a cohort of patients with early onset breast cancer. We examined 126 consecutive patients who developed breast cancer at or before the age of 40 for mutations of p53 within conserved regions of the gene. One patient with an inherited germ-line mutation of the p53 gene was identified but the functional significance of this mutation was not clear. It thus appears that only a small percentage of patients with breast cancer under the age of 40 carry germ-line mutations of the p53 gene, an observation which has implications for potential screening and risk assessment in such patients.
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PMID:Inherited p53 gene mutations in breast cancer. 158 12

The cause of Li-Fraumeni syndrome, a rare group syndrome of familial cancers, has recently been identified. Patients with this inherited condition are highly susceptible to specific neoplasms, including early-onset breast cancers. The available evidence links Li-Fraumeni syndrome to inherited mutations of the tumor suppressor gene p53. Moreover, somatically acquired p53 mutations and gene deletions are common feature in breast cancer of sporadic origin. These findings suggest that germline p53 mutations are important in familial and, possibly sporadic, breast tumors. We have therefore screened lymphocyte DNA from 19 unrelated bilateral cancer patients for germline p53 mutations in exons 5, 6, 7 and 8. We have however detected no germline mutations by means of the single-strand confirmation polymorphism technique in any of the lymphocyte DNAs examined and conclude that p53 mutations are not generally involved in bilateral breast cancer.
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PMID:Absence of p53 germ-line mutations in bilateral breast cancer patients. 158 36

The constant denaturant gel electrophoresis technique was used to screen for TP53 germ line mutations in 237 women with breast carcinoma (167 unselected patients, 30 patients with at least one first-degree relative with breast cancer, and 40 women diagnosed with breast cancer before age 35). A germ line mutation at codon 181 was noted in one of the unselected patients and a codon 245 mutation in one of the early-onset patients. Both had a family history of breast cancer and other malignancies suggestive of Li-Fraumeni syndrome. The codon 245 mutation was also present in this patient's affected mother.
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PMID:Screening for germ line TP53 mutations in breast cancer patients. 159 32

Using a polymerase chain reaction-single strand conformation polymorphism approach we analyzed 96 human primary breast tumors for the presence of mutations in exons 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 of the p53 gene. These exons have been shown to comprise highly conserved sequences and the portion including exons 5 through 9 is believed to be the target for over 90% of the acquired mutations in human cancer. Eighteen tumors of the 96 (18.7%) tested showed reproducibly a variant band indicative of a mutation. Most (15 tumors) of the mutations were single nucleotide substitutions and G:C to A:T transitions were prevalent (6 tumors), G:C to T:A transversions came next (4 tumors), and guanines were always on the nontranscribed strand. Concomitant loss of the wild type allele and mutation of the other copy was observed in only 3 of 18 mutated cases; this is consistent with the heterogeneous cellular composition of breast tumors. Furthermore p53 mutations were correlated to estrogen and/or progesterone receptor negative tumors, thus indicating their relationships to aggressive breast cancer. No association could be observed with DNA amplification events in these tumors.
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PMID:p53 mutations occur in aggressive breast cancer. 161 67


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