Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A mutation in the tumor suppressor p53 gene resulting in an Arg-->Ser substitution in position 249 is found frequently in human hepatocellular carcinomas associated with hepatitis B infection and with aflatoxin exposure. To determine the significance of this mutation in an in vivo experimental model using transgenic mice, we introduced a two-nucleotide change in the mouse p53 gene at amino-acid position 246, which is equivalent to position 249 in human p53, by the recombinant polymerase chain reaction mismatched primer method. This p53 mutation resulted in the same change, an Arg-->Ser substitution, as in the human p53 gene at position 249. We now report that the protein product of this mutant mouse p53ser246 had properties similar to those of the wild-type protein when tested by binding to (i) monoclonal antibodies PAb246 and PAb240, ii) simian virus 40 large T antigen, and (iii) heat-shock protein. However, it had mutant-type transforming properties when tested for colony formation with an osteosarcoma cell line. It was not active, as is wild-type p53, in transcription activation of the muscle creatine kinase promoter. These properties are the same as those found in the p53trp248 product of the p53 mutation associated with the Li-Fraumeni syndrome. Although less is known about the human p53ser249 product associated with hepatocellular carcinoma, the mutant murine p53ser246 protein shares the known properties of the human gene product.
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PMID:Characterization of a murine p53ser246 mutant equivalent to the human p53ser249 associated with hepatocellular carcinoma and aflatoxin exposure. 760 78

We demonstrated a germline p53 replication error in two generations of a Li-Fraumeni family affected with liposarcoma, adrenocortical carcinoma, and osteosarcoma. The trinucleotide repeat mutation changed 5'-AGT GTG GTG GTG-3' at codons 215-218 to 5'-AGT TGG TTG GTG GTG-3'. The predicted protein would be elongated by one amino acid (val216-->trp leu) without a change in charge. Detection of p53 in the adrenal tumor by immunostaining suggested that the mutant protein was expressed. Persistence of the mutation in the germline may suggest a defect in DNA repair in the family member first affected. This is the first report where germline transmission of replication-damaged p53 trinucleotide repeats is associated with the Li-Fraumeni syndrome.
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PMID:Complex replication error causes p53 mutation in a Li-Fraumeni family. 761 54

Recombinant adenovirus Ad5CMV-p53 induced a strong cytocidal effect in Saos-LM2 cells. This cell line, derived from human osteosarcoma Saos-2 cells, has a homozygous deletion of the p53 gene. By using immunocytochemical and Western blot analyses, we demonstrated that Ad5CMV-p53 effectively infected Saos-LM2 cells at multiplicities of infection of 10 to 50 plaque-forming units/cell and mediated a high-level expression of the exogenous wild-type p53 protein in the cells. Growth of the infected cells was greatly suppressed whereas that of mock- or control virus-infected cells was not. Because wild-type p53 induces apoptosis in certain types of cells, we studied DNA fragmentation in situ in the Ad5CMV-p53-infected Saos-LM2 cells by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase assays, which yielded positive nuclear staining. Further analysis of the Ad5CMV-p53-infected Saos-LM2 cells by light and electron microscopy demonstrated that the cells underwent the characteristic morphological changes of apoptosis such as plasma-membrane blebbing, nuclear condensation, and fragmentation. These changes were not observed in mock- or control virus-infected cells. Our results on Saos-LM2 cells indicate that apoptosis induced by Ad5CMV-p53 may be one of the mechanisms underlying the cytocidal effect of Ad5CMV-p53.
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PMID:Apoptosis induced in human osteosarcoma cells is one of the mechanisms for the cytocidal effect of Ad5CMV-p53. 762 Dec 57

A human p53 mutant, p53Val-138 (amino acid 138, Alanine-->Valine), generated by in vitro mutagenesis was introduced into Saos-2 human osteosarcoma and Jurkat acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia cell lines, both lacking p53 protein expression. p53Val-138 caused growth arrest in Saos-2 cell line and apoptosis in Jurkat cell line at 32.5 degrees C while it allowed both cell lines to grow continuously at 37.5 degrees C. p53Val-138 activated expression of p53-responsive genes including MDM2, GADD45 and WAF1/CIP1/SD11 in Saos-2 cell line upon the temperature shift-down from 37.5 degrees C to 32.5 degrees C. Thus, p53Val-138 acted as a temperature-sensitive p53 mutant. Taking advantage of these human cell systems, we demonstrated that p53-mediated cell cycle arrest occurred in G1 and G2/M phases of Saos-2 cell line but not in Jurkat cell line. The induced level of WAF1/CIP1/SDI1 mRNA by p53 was extremely lower in Jurkat cell line than that of Saos-2 cell line. However, MDM2 mRNA accumulated to the similar levels in these two cell lines. These results suggest that a factor(s) other than p53 may be involved in differential expression of WAF1/CIP1/SDI1 and MDM2 mRNA.
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PMID:A human temperature-sensitive p53 mutant p53Val-138: modulation of the cell cycle, viability and expression of p53-responsive genes. 762 16

Since the introduction of standardized chemotherapy protocols of osteosarcoma a lot of new aspects in prognosis and curability of these have best developed. Current subclassification which divided osteosarcoma into a conventional type and eleven important recognizable varieties is one of the reason for this success. Cytological grading also serves as a good indicator for the prognosis and is an important criterion for application of adjuvant chemotherapy. Several structure proteins of the extracellular matrix have gained importance in making the diagnosis of an osteosarcoma. Immunohistochemically and biochemically evaluations could show that different collagenous-proteins can be useful for the differential diagnosis of bone tumors. The integration of molecular pathologic methods into the structural morphologic findings will be helpfull in the identification of mutated structure proteins. Oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes are of major importance for the tumorigenesis of osteosarcoma. The prognostic significance of the inactivation of p53 and RBI gene remains to be elucidated. Resistance to chemotherapy is the major mechanism responsible for the failure of osteosarcoma treatment. The main cause for this failure is multidrug resistance, which is often related to a plasma membrane protein, the P-glycoprotein. Immunohistologic investigations of P-glycoprotein are not sufficient to demonstrate the possible association between overexpression of this protein and tumor progression.
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PMID:Current aspects of the pathology of osteosarcoma. 764 21

The Wilms' tumor-suppressor gene product WT1 coimmunoprecipitates with p53 from baby rat kidney (BRK) cells and Wilms' tumor specimens, and expression of WT1 in BRK cells is associated with increased levels of endogenous wild-type p53 protein. To study the effect of WT1 on p53 function, we cotransfected expression constructs into Saos-2 cells, an osteosarcoma cell line without endogenous expression of either gene. Expression of WT1 resulted in increased steady-state levels of p53, attributable to a prolongation in protein half-life, and associated with protection against papillomavirus E6-mediated degradation of p53. This effect mapped to zinc fingers 1 and 2 of WT1 and was not observed with the closely related EGR1 protein. The stabilized p53 demonstrated enhanced binding to its target DNA sequence and increased trans-activation of a promoter containing this RGC site, but reduced transcriptional repression of a TATA-containing promoter lacking this site. Expression of WT1 inhibited p53-mediated apoptosis triggered by UV irradiation or by expression of temperature-sensitive p53 in the wild-type conformation, but did not affect p53-mediated cell cycle arrest. We conclude that WT1 protein can stabilize p53, modulate its trans-activational properties, and inhibit its ability to induce apoptosis. This effect may contribute to the elevated levels of wild-type p53 protein that are observed in Wilms' tumors.
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PMID:The WT1 gene product stabilizes p53 and inhibits p53-mediated apoptosis. 765 66

Lambda ZAP cDNA library constructed from spleen of a p53-deficient mouse was screened by South-Western technique using Fragment A, a DNA sequence that p53 specifically binds to, as a probe. One (clone 2) of six clones isolated was identical to MEF2c, a MADS-family transcription factor. Transcripts of the mef2c gene was also detected in spleen where the expression has not been reported so far. Isolated clones except clone 2 had a growth-suppression activity on p53-deficient osteosarcoma cell line (Saos II). Clone 2 repressed the transactivation from Fragment A by p53, suggesting that MEF2c may act as a negative regulator of p53-responsive element.
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PMID:Repression of p53-dependent sequence-specific transactivation by MEF2c. 767 53

Increasing evidence indicates that p53 is a transcriptional trans-activator through its sequence-specific DNA binding domain. Tumor-derived p53 mutations disrupt the trans-activation ability mainly due to loss of its sequence-specific DNA binding. Using both yeast and mammalian cell assays, the effect of p53 mutations in the carboxy terminal portion was investigated in order to address how p53 mutations outside of the DNA binding domain affect p53 function. The p53 cDNA in the carboxy-terminus was randomly mutagenized by error-prone polymerase chain reactions and the amplified cDNA was screened for the ability to trans-activate using a yeast assay. Four p53 mutations, including two missense and two nonsense mutations located in the carboxy-terminal oligomerization domain, were further analysed for trans-activation, cell cycle arrest and colony formation in a human osteosarcoma cell line, Saos-2. These functional properties of p53 were disrupted by the missense mutations. Surprisingly, one of the nonsense mutations disrupts the trans-activation function and the ability to G1 arrest but shows a strong inhibition of colony formation. These results confirm that mutations in the oligomerization domain can inactivate p53 function and also indicate that p53-mediated cell growth inhibition does not necessarily depend on the ability to arrest cell cycle.
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PMID:Mutational analysis of the carboxy-terminal portion of p53 using both yeast and mammalian cell assays in vivo. 773 2

The spectrum of p53 mutations differs among human cancer types. We have hypothesized that the p53 mutational spectrum observed in particular tumor types reflects the functional ability of different p53 mutants to modulate wild-type (WT) p53-dependent gene transcription. Missense p53 mutants representing several mutational hotspot codons were cotransfected with WT p53 and analysed for their effects on p53-dependent transactivation of a reporter construct containing a specific p53 binding sequence (PG13-CAT) in human tumor cell lines lacking endogenous p53. Our results show that the ability of p53 mutants to inhibit WT p53-mediated transactivation is cell type dependent. In cell lines derived from a lung adenocarcinoma and a mesothelioma, the transactivation function of WT p53 was strongly inhibited by all p53 mutants examined. However, in cell lines derived from a prostate carcinoma and an osteosarcoma, the mutants examined generally had only minimal dominant negative effects. In cell lines derived from a hepatocellular carcinoma and an ovarian carcinoma, two mutants (248trp and 273his) enhanced WT p53-mediated transactivation of the reporter construct. Additional mutants retained the ability to inhibit WT p53-mediated transactivation in these cell lines. In addition, in a series of four breast tumor cell lines, the p53 mutants examined had similar effects on WT p53 transactivation ability including enhanced transactivation activity in the 273his cotransfectants. The p53 mutants were incapable of transactivating the PG13-CAT reporter in the absence of WT p53 expression. Therefore, the dominant negative effects of p53 mutants on WT p53 function may vary depending on the particular cell type. In addition, mutants with stronger inhibitory capabilities may confer a selective advantage during the tumorigenic process.
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PMID:Effects of p53 mutants on wild-type p53-mediated transactivation are cell type dependent. 778 55

The C/EBP-homologous transcription factor CHOP (GADD153) is inducible by growth inhibition or DNA damage, and has been shown to be oncogenically activated by the specific (12;16) translocation in human myxoid liposarcoma. We have now found CHOP amplification in two sarcoma cell lines with previously reported amplification of the nearby GLI gene. Among 98 other human sarcomas of various types, CHOP was amplified in a hemangiopericytoma, a liposarcoma, and two osteosarcoma. High constitutive expression levels of CHOP were observed in tumors with gene amplification, but also in some other samples. The nearby MDM2 gene, which codes for a protein that may inactivate wild-type p53, has previously been reported to be frequently amplified in sarcoma. In our sarcoma panel, MDM2 was amplified in 9 cases. MDM2 and CHOP were co-amplified in two of these, whereas the two osteosarcomas had amplified CHOP but not MDM2. CHOP was amplified in both cell lines with GLI amplification, and MDM2 only in one. No mutations in the TP53 gene have been found in samples with amplification of MDM2. In contrast, the cell line in which CHOP but not MDM2 was amplified had mutated TP53, suggesting that selection of this amplicon was not mediated through p53 inactivation.
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PMID:The protooncogene CHOP/GADD153, involved in growth arrest and DNA damage response, is amplified in a subset of human sarcomas. 782 48


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