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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
MDM2
and p53 immunohistochemical protein expression was analysed in lymphocytes and in reactive and neoplastic lymphoid tissue. Phytohaemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated lymphocytes displayed
MDM2
and p53 co-expression. In 8 of 8 tonsils, 24 of 24
Hodgkin's disease
(HD), and 10 of 24 high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (HG-NHL) specimens,
MDM2
paralleled p53 nuclear expression in non-tumour and tumour cells. The number of positive cells was greater and the staining intensity was stronger for p53 than for
MDM2
. In another nine of the 24 HG-NHL cases studied, dissociated expression was observed, with high p53 expression and very low or absent
MDM2
expression. In five cases, both
MDM2
and p53 were negative. The eight low-grade NHL (LG-NHL) cases were also
MDM2
- and p53-negative.
MDM2
and p53 expression in PHA-activated lymphocytes and reactive lymphoid tissue is probably an expression of opposing biological signals regulating cell proliferation. Parallel
MDM2
and p53 expression in all HD and in 10 out of 24 HG/NHL cases may indicate that this growth suppressive pathway is maintained in those cases. However, dissociated
MDM2
/p53 expression (nine cases) and the absence of expression of both proteins (five cases) may represent examples of deregulation of this growth control pathway. These findings are in agreement with previous in vitro studies in cell lines regarding the role of
MDM2
/p53 lymphoid tissue, suggesting a possible role for
MDM2
deregulation in lymphomagenesis.
...
PMID:MDM2 expression in lymphoid cells and reactive and neoplastic lymphoid tissue. Comparative study with p53 expression. 747 76
p53 protein overexpression is a frequent finding in non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas (NHL), being detected in over 25% of the cases. Moreover, some high-grade lymphomas and a large fraction of low-grade tumors show a pattern of scattered p53 accumulation in a limited percentage of neoplastic cells. In contrast, NHLs show a low frequency of p53 gene mutations. To investigate the molecular bases of p53 protein overexpression, a large series of NHLs was analyzed for p53 gene status. The analysis of the entire coding region of the gene (exons 2-11) and corresponding donor and acceptor splicing sites indicated that a significant proportion of p53-positive tumors overexpresses a wild-type form of p53 protein (wt-p53). To assess whether wt-p53 accumulation was related to the formation of inactive complexes with endogenous proteins,
MDM2
oncogene expression and amplification were analyzed.
MDM2
overexpression was detected only in one third of the wt-p53-positive cases, thus excluding that
MDM2
accounts tout court for the accumulation of a normal p53 protein. However, the fact that
MDM2
overexpression was detected in only the p53-positive cases and the observation that
MDM2
-positive cells were a subpopulation of p53-positive cells suggest a link between the two phenomena. In particular, our results indicate that the accumulation of a wt form of p53 protein could promote the overexpression of the
MDM2
gene product. In addition, the prevalence of
MDM2
positivity in intermediate/high-grade tumors together with the concordant expression of wt-p53 and
MDM2
only in the high-grade component of a 'composite' lymphoma suggests that perturbation in the
MDM2
/p53 critical ratio could play a role in lymphoma progression.
...
PMID:MDM2 overexpression does not account for stabilization of wild-type p53 protein in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. 775 55
The neoplastic nature of
Hodgkin's disease
(HD) is suggested by several lines of evidence, including aggressive clinical course, presence of proliferating atypical cells morphologically recognized as
Hodgkin
's and Reed-Sternberg cells (H-RS), aneuploidy, and, in the minority of cases, clonality. Nevertheless, the etiopathogenesis of HD still remains elusive, and probably diverse. This uncertainty is partly due to the peculiar histology of HD lesions, characterised by the paucity of the putative neoplastic cell component, i.e. H-RS cells, admixed to a variety of reactive cells which prevent an exhaustive investigation at molecular level. Nevertheless, the possible involvement of different molecules with oncogenic potential has been recently suggested on the basis of immunohistological and molecular biology studies. These include oncogenes such as bcl-2 and
MDM2
and anti-oncogenes such as p53. In addition, a large amount of data has accumulated on the possible role of EBV infection in HD. The colonization of lymphoid tissues by immortalized H-RS cells can account for the derangement of cytokine networks leading to microenvironmental and systemic abnormalities. In addition, a variety of soluble receptors (sIL-2R, sCD30, sTNF-R), and adhesion molecules (sICAM-1) are abnormally produced at sites of disease involvement. Some of these molecules still retain the ability to bind their ligands and can potentially contribute to the derangement of immune mechanisms observed in HD. Many of these soluble molecules can also be found in the patient's sera providing new potential prognostic and follow-up parameters in HD patients. The comparative analysis of the same molecules within the tissue, using immunohistochemistry, and in the blood, using immunochemical assays, appears as a promising informative approach.
...
PMID:Biopathologic features of Hodgkin's disease. 778 48
The possible involvement of p53 tumor suppressor gene in the pathogenesis of
Hodgkin's disease
(HD) is suggested by the frequent finding of abnormal accumulation of p53 protein in the nuclei of Reed-Sternberg cells and their variants (H-RS) in a large proportion of cases. This finding, besides being consistent with the presence of p53 gene mutations, might represent a consequence of the inactivating interaction between p53 and p53-binding proteins such as the product of the
MDM2
cellular oncogene. We have examined an unselected series of 77 HD cases of different histologic patterns for the expression of p53 and
MDM2
proteins, using specific monoclonal antibodies and sensitive immunohistochemical techniques in single- and double-marker combination. In the large majority of cases (66/77), a variable proportion of H-RS cells expressed
MDM2
that was strictly confined to the nuclei. Coexpression of both
MDM2
and p53 was common in the same cells. The abnormal nuclear expression of p53 and
MDM2
did not seem to correlate with the presence of Epstein-Barr virus infection, as shown by the results of LMP-1 antigen expression and EBER in situ hybridization analysis. Our data suggest that the abnormal accumulation of
MDM2
and p53 proteins in HD might reflect a derangement of molecular mechanisms that could play a pathogenetic role in this disease.
...
PMID:Abnormal expression of the p53-binding protein MDM2 in Hodgkin's disease. 799 45
Retinoblastoma (Rb) tumour-suppressor protein plays a critical role in cell cycle control. Rb inactivation is a frequent phenomenon in tumours of different cell lineages, in which the absence of Rb protein has been considered to be a marker of Rb disregulation. We used modern immunohistochemical techniques to study the expression of Rb protein in a large series of 130 patients with
Hodgkin's disease
. Simultaneously, Western blot was used to analyse a more restricted group (12 patients) to confirm the immunohistochemical results and to clarify the phosphorylation status of Rb protein. As the level of Rb expression varied according to cell cycle stage, we also performed immunostaining for Ki67, a protein present in proliferating cells. To make comparison possible, we first characterised the amount and phosphorylation status of Rb protein in reactive lymphoid tissue and phytohaemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated lymphocytes. The presence of p53 in Sternberg-Reed cells was also included in the study, as both proteins (p53 and Rb) have been found to be closely associated in cell cycle control. PHA-stimulated peripheral blood lymphocytes showed a parallel increase in Rb and cell cycle progression, together with progressive Rb phosphorylation. In reactive lymphoid tissue there was also a clear correlation between Rb expression and the Ki67 proliferation index (R = 0.96, P = 0.038). When analysing
Hodgkin's disease
samples, a clear difference emerges between cases of nodular lymphocyte predominance, which preserve the relationship between Rb and Ki67 expression (r = 0.8727, P = 0.000), and classical forms of
Hodgkin's disease
(nodular sclerosis and mixed cellularity), which display a strong deviation from this pattern. Two main anomalies were found: (1) One group of 21/130 cases with partial or total loss of Rb protein expression, which could reflect the existence of genetic alterations, or an altered transcriptional or translational regulation of Rb gene. (2) Another group with an abnormally high Rb/Ki67 ratio, which could support conflicting interpretations: (i) excess Rb protein for controlling cell cycle progression; or (ii) adhesion of Rb protein to other cellular or viral proteins, such as p53 and
MDM2
. The results of this study indicate an anomalous pattern of expression of Rb in classical forms of
Hodgkin's disease
, and suggest the possibility of undertaking functional studies (E1A adhesion, p16 expression) with the aim of better characterising the status of Rb protein, and correlating these findings with clinical course in
Hodgkin's disease
patients.
...
PMID:Anomalous retinoblastoma protein expression in Sternberg-Reed cells in Hodgkin's disease: a comparative study with p53 and Ki67 expression. 885 74
Mutations in the p53 tumour suppressor gene are the most common genetic alteration found in human cancers. Most of them are accompanied by stabilization of the protein, which renders it detectable through immunohistochemical techniques. Although p53 expression is a very common finding in
Hodgkin's disease
(HD), the status of the p53 gene is scarcely known, due to the difficulty in sequencing this gene in a lesion in which tumour cells are thought to constitute a very minor subpopulation, diluted in a background of supposedly benign cells. The pattern of expression of two downstream p53 proteins (
MDM2
and p21 WAF1/CIP1, was studied as an indirect way of assessing p53 gene status.
MDM2
is a wild-p53 inducible protein which may form a complex with p53, abrogating its function, as has been found in human sarcomas and other malignancies. p21WAF1/CIP1 is another protein inducible by wild-type p53, involved in inhibiting cell-cycle progression, through binding to cyclin/cyclin-dependent-kinase complexes.
MDM2
and p21WAF1/CIP1 immunostaining was detected in all the cases analysed, independently of histological type, and were mainly present in Sternberg-Reed and
Hodgkin
(H & SR) cells. These immunohistochemical results were confirmed by Western blotting. To study the cause of MDM2 protein accumulation,
MDM2
mRNA expression was also investigated by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The results show the presence of
MDM2
transcripts in all cases of HD, albeit at lower levels than those found in reactive lymphoid tissue. These results seem to support the hypothesis that p53 is transcriptionally active in at least some of the H & SR cells in HD, and is able to induce
MDM2
and p21WAF1/CIP1 protein expression.
...
PMID:MDM2 and p21WAF1/CIP1, wild-type p53-induced proteins, are regularly expressed by Sternberg-Reed cells in Hodgkin's disease. 894 16
p53 is a tumour suppressor gene which is often found to be inactivated in most types of human cancer. p53 is a transcription factor, the inactivation of which may lead to significant variations in the levels of p53 downstream proteins, such as p21WAF1/CIP1 and
MDM2
. In view of the significance of p21WAF1/CIP1 and
MDM2
as wild-type (wt) p53 targets, this study was undertaken to monitor the varying expression of these proteins in non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas (NHLs) in relation to p53 gene status. A total of 57 cases of different histological types of NHL were included in this study. Proteins p53, p21WAF1/CIP1, and
MDM2
were analysed by immunohistochemical techniques, taking the levels expressed in reactive lymphoid tissues as reference points. p53 gene point mutations (exons 5-8) were looked for using the PCR-SSCP technique and direct sequencing. Fifteen of the 57 cases studied showed 16 mutations at the p53 gene: 12 missense, one nonsense, two silent mutations, and one frameshift deletion. Most missense mutations were associated with high levels of p53 protein, while the nonsense mutations and frameshift deletion did not induce detectable levels of p53. All cases with mutation at the p53 gene (15) showed null or low levels of p21WAF1/CIP1 and
MDM2
proteins, suggesting that null or missense mutations at this gene give rise to a protein that is unable to transactivate the p21WAF1/CIP1 and
MDM2
genes. The association between missense p53 mutation and dissociate immunophenotype (p53+,
MDM2
-, p21-) was statistically significant (Fisher's exact test, P = 0.0024). This anomalous p53+,
MDM2
-, p21- phenotype was also found in a small group of five cases with wt p53; this could indicate that in these cases p53 transactivation capacity has been abrogated by a mechanism other than p53 mutation. Most cases with the wt p53 gene show simultaneous immunohistochemical expression of all three proteins and often display higher levels than those found in reactive lymphoid tissue. There is a tendency for EBV-positive cases to harbour high levels of p53+ and p21+, suggesting that EBV could be involved in the nuclear accumulation of p53 and p21WAF1/CIP1 in NHL.
...
PMID:p21WAF1/CIP1 and MDM2 expression in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and their relationship to p53 status: a p53+, MDM2-, p21-immunophenotype associated with missense p53 mutations. 907 3
This study investigates the human oncoprotein
MDM2
, which interferes with regulation of cell division and apoptosis. Fifteen mixed-type follicular non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas, ten leukaemias, two hepatocellular carcinomas, one osteosarcoma, and ten normal cell lines (fibroblasts, osteoblasts, mesothelium, peripheral lymphocytes) were tested for
MDM2
expression and
MDM2
gene mutation by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), immunocytochemistry, and nucleotide sequence analysis. Two follicular lymphomas, three leukaemias, both hepatocellular carcinomas, and the osteosarcoma sample showed transcription of the activated
MDM2
gene. These samples lacked amplified
MDM2
genes and carried mis-sense, non-sense and frame-shift mutations in a zinc finger region of
MDM2
, altering the amino acid sequence or causing premature termination of transcription. The mis-sense mutations were found in tumour cells that showed significant accumulation of
MDM2
and lack of nuclear p53. Non-sense mutations and frame-shift mutations were found in tumours lacking
MDM2
proteins. The mutations may affect the biological properties of
MDM2
proteins.
...
PMID:Point mutations and nucleotide insertions in the MDM2 zinc finger structure of human tumours. 922 42
Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is an uncommon but serious complication of patients who undergo autologous bone marrow transplantation (auto-BMT) for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma or
Hodgkin's disease
. Some patients exhibit an indolent course, but others succumb to aggressive disease. p53 overexpression is rare in de novo MDS but common in therapy-associated MDS. We used an immunostaining method to analyze expression of p53, the p53-associated tumor suppressor gene products,
MDM2
, p21waf1, retinoblastoma gene protein (pRB), and the antiapoptotic oncoprotein bcl-2 before and after BMT in BM specimens from eight patients with clonal karyotypic abnormalities characteristic of MDS. Staining was compared with findings in normal BM specimens and specimens from auto-BMT controls and patients with de novo MDS. p53 protein was found in three (75%) of four post-transplantation specimens from patients in whom a clinically aggressive form of MDS developed. In contrast, p53 was absent in all of the specimens from four patients with karyotypic evidence of MDS, but with indolent disease. bcl-2 protein was overexpressed by immature myeloid cells in seven of eight pre-BMT specimens. After BMT, it was predominantly found at low levels in cases positive for p53.
MDM2
was present only after transplantation and was found with equal frequency in patients with indolent and aggressive MDS. We detected p21waf1 in only one aggressive post-BMT MDS specimen. pRB was normally expressed in all of the specimens. These data show that p53 and bcl-2 staining patterns in post-transplantation MDS are similar to those described in therapy-associated MDS. p53 positivity is associated with poor prognosis in auto-BMT patients with MDS. Expression of
MDM2
, p21waf1, and pRB in this group of patients is not helpful in predicting outcome.
...
PMID:Expression of p53, MDM2, p21waf1, bcl-2, and retinoblastoma gene proteins in myelodysplastic syndrome after autologous bone marrow transplantation for lymphoma. 938 63
A new category of oncogenes regulating apoptosis, p53 and bcl-2, and the Epstein Barr virus (EBV) latent membrane protein-1 (LMP-1) have been related to
Hodgkin's disease
(HD) pathogenesis. We attempt to determine p53, mdm2, p21waf-1, bcl-2 and LMP-1 immunohistochemical expression in tissue sections from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded lymph node biopsies of pediatric HD. P53 was detected in the nucleus of Reed Sternberg cells and their variants (H-RS) in 68% of the HD cases. However, there was no statistically significant association with either clinical stages or with histological subtypes. P21waf-1, an indirect marker of p53 functional status, showed nuclear labelling of H-RS in all the studied cases.
MDM2
co-expressed with p53 in 62% of the cases, suggesting that both proteins regulate one another, in HD by a self regulatory loop. Bcl-2 cytoplasmatic expression in H-RS was demonstrated in 65% of the cases. There was co-expression of bcl-2 and p53 in 51%, but it failed to correlate with a poor prognosis. LMP-1 labelling was shown in 51% of the cases, disclosing a statistically significant association with the under 6-year group (p = 0.005, Fisher's exact test). Since LMP-1 induces the expression of bcl-2 in vitro, the relation of both proteins was analysed and found to co-express in 15/37 cases, with a statistically significant association only in the under 6-year group (p = 0.001, Fisher's exact test). Abnormal accumulation of these oncoproteins in tumour cells could play a role in the pathogenesis of a subset of pediatric HD.
...
PMID:Oncogene expression in tumour cells of pediatric Hodgkin's disease in Argentina--correlation with Epstein Barr virus presence. 954 44
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