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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (tumor progression)
40,807 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The replacement of functional genes into cells that lack genes or have mutant genes is the basis of gene therapy. In cancer, where cells often have multiple genetic defects, the replacement of critical genes may suffice to suppress cell growth or induce cell death. The high frequency of mutations of the p53 tumor-suppressor gene in human cancers, including primary brain tumors, suggests that p53 plays a critical role in carcinogenesis and tumor progression. We report the successful transfer of the wild-type p53 gene using a defective herpes simplex viral vector into a human medulloblastoma cell line containing a mutant copy of p53. Upon gene transfer, we detected novel expression of wild-type p53 protein in the cells. In addition, the p53 protein was functionally active, since gene transfer resulted in increased levels of mdm2 proteins and induced cell cycle arrest of the majority of transduced cells. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the use of this vector system to carry wild-type p53. We conclude that defective herpes simplex viral vectors can transfer and express p53 in human primary brain tumor cells in vitro, restoring wild-type p53 tumor-suppressor functions.
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PMID:Gene transfer of wild-type p53 results in restoration of tumor-suppressor function in a medulloblastoma cell line. 764 54

The current paradigm states that cancer progression is caused by random independent mutations, each selected for its survival advantages. The accelerated rates of phenotypic changes, the pleiotropic effect of several genes involved in progression--which need not be necessarily mutated for inducing the observed changes in cancer cell behaviour--lead us to propose an alternative hypothesis. Malignant progression might be a result of the unveiling of a cell-survival program, induced by various aggressions in the same way as the SOS system is induced and regulated in bacteria. This hypothesis depends on the homology between several genes involved in cancer progression (such as bcl2, mdm2, the mismatch repair genes, the heat shock protein genes, the pleiotropic resistance genes, the telomerase gene ...) and several genes involved in the survival of prokaryotes and eukaryotes under stress. The development of multicellular organisms could not take place without the building of a control program, exemplified by the so-called anti-oncogenes. However, this control program had to integrate some weaknesses, in order to allow for embryogenesis, growth, and wound healing. These weaknesses, neutral from an evolutionary point of view--since most cancers are sporadic and kill their hosts long after the birth of the offspring--are exploited by the survival program of individual cells, inherited from the genome of prokaryotes and unicellular eukaryotes, and repressed but not suppressed in animals. If this theory is true, it is probable that (i) no anti-oncogenes will be found in unicellular organisms, (ii) the sensitivity to mutations will be higher in genes involved in proliferation and in anti-oncogenes such as p53 and Rb, than in genes not involved in the cancer process, (iii) a process of transfer of genetic information exists in cancer cells as it exists in bacteria. The identification of the genes governing the survival program could lead to new therapeutic approaches.
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PMID:Tumour progression: random mutations or an integrated survival response to cellular stress conserved from unicellular organisms? 873 76

Myxoid and round cell liposarcoma represents a morphological spectrum in which tumor progression from low-grade myxoid to high-grade round cell areas is frequently observed. A distinctive t(12;16)(q13;p11) reciprocal translocation rearranges the CHOP gene localized to 12q13 in most cases. Data concerning the occurrence of cell cycle aberrations in this subset of mesenchymal malignancies are very limited. Therefore, we analyzed a histologically homogeneous series of 21 cases of myxoid and round cell liposarcoma. The p53 pathway was studied by investigating the TP53 gene and protein, mdm2 protein, and p21Waf1 protein. The Rb-cyclin D pathway was analyzed by studying the pRb protein, the p16MTS1 gene, cyclin D1, cyclin D3, p27Kip1, cdk4, and cdk6 proteins. In contrast with the rare involvement of the TP53 gene in well differentiated liposarcoma, aberrations of the TP53 gene were observed in approximately 30% of cases of myxoid and round cell liposarcoma. Notably, mdm2 overexpression was seen in 56% of cases and correlated with histological grade, therefore indicating a possible role in tumor progression. Abnormalities involving the Rb-cyclin D pathway were observed in more than 90% of cases. pRb loss was present in one-third of cases and, at variance with that observed in other subsets of sarcoma, overexpression of cyclin Ds represented a rare event. Interestingly, upregulation of either cdk4 or cdk6 was demonstrated in 85% of cases.
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PMID:Molecular aberrations of the G1-S checkpoint in myxoid and round cell liposarcoma. 940 3

Bilharzial-related bladder carcinoma (BBC) is the most common malignant neoplasm in Egypt, also occurring with a high incidence in other regions of the Middle East and East Africa. The clinical and pathological features of BBC are different than those described for the conventional transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder, including the high incidence of squamous cell carcinoma reported in BBC and the fact that over 90% of BBC cases at presentation are advanced-stage tumors (P3 and P4). This study was conducted to better define the phenotypic alterations associated with BBC affecting the p53 cell cycle control pathway, including altered patterns of expression of downstream effector proteins such as mdm2 and p21/WAF1. A well-characterized cohort of 125 patients affected with bilharzial-related bladder tumors was studied. Tumors were classified as squamous carcinomas (n = 68), transitional cell carcinomas (n = 55), or adenocarcinomas (n = 2). The products encoded by TP53, mdm2, and p21/WAF1 genes were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. Furthermore, the patterns of expression of these molecules were correlated with the Ki67 proliferative index. In addition, the microanatomical distribution of programmed cell death was assessed in a subset of tumors, using the so-called terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick end labeling method. p53 nuclear overexpression was identified in 25 (20%) of 125 cases. Nuclear overexpression of mdm2 was detected in 74 (59.2%) of 125 cases. There was a statistically significant association between coexpression of both p53 and mdm2 and detection of lymph node metastases (P = 0.04). p21/WAF1 expression was detected in 87 (72%) of 121 evaluable cases. A high Ki67 proliferative index was observed in 99 (86%) of 115 evaluable cases. There was a statistically significant association between high Ki67 proliferative index and mdm2-positive phenotype (P = 0.005) and deep muscle invasion (P3b; P = 0.026) as well as lymph node metastases (P = 0.039). Apoptosis was observed in terminally differentiated tumor cells identified in the superficial layers of well-differentiated squamous carcinoma or exfoliating cells in transitional lesions. However, only rare apoptotic tumor cells were found in basal or suprabasal layers as well as in the invasive elements of the neoplasms studied. These results suggest that the frequency of p53 nuclear overexpression in BBC is lower than that reported for conventional transitional cell carcinoma. Nevertheless, tumors with p53 alterations have a greater propensity to progress. The prominent number of cases displaying an mdm2-positive phenotype suggests that this may be an early incident in BBC and should be regarded as a potential oncogenic phenomenon. This is supported by the significant correlation between high Ki67 proliferative index and mdm2 overexpression. The association of an aggressive clinical course with the coexpression of both p53 and mdm2 products might be viewed as a cooperative effect that develops in tumor progression.
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PMID:Alterations affecting the p53 control pathway in bilharzial-related bladder cancer. 981 16

The MDM2 oncoprotein encodes a 90 kDa nuclear phosphoprotein capable of abrogating the growth suppressive functions of p53 and pRb tumor suppressor proteins by direct interaction. Alternative splicing of MDM2 protein coding sequences has been documented during tumor progression in human ovarian and bladder carcinomas. The aim of this study was to determine whether alternative splicing of MDM2 occurs during breast tumorigenesis in mice and humans and whether protein coding sequences were affected. Specimens representing normal and malignant breast tissues from the murine D2 mammary tumor model system and human breast carcinomas were examined. Three distinct mdm2 mRNA transcripts of 3.3, 1.6 and 1.5 kb were detected in normal and malignant murine mammary tissues by Northern blot analysis using a full-length mdm2 cDNA probe. Additional Northern blot analysis using a probe derived from exon 12 of murine mdm2 demonstrated that the 1.5 and 1.6 kb transcripts lack sequences encoding the C-terminus of the protein. No evidence of internal deletions of protein coding sequences of mdm2 was detected in any of the normal mammary tissues or D2 murine mammary tumors examined by reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR). Three distinct MDM2 transcripts of 6.7, 4.7 and 1.9 kb were detected in malignant human breast tissue by Northern blot analysis using a cDNA probe specific for the complete open reading frame of human MDM2. However, a cDNA probe specific for the last exon of human MDM2 hybridized only to the 6.7 and 4.7 kb transcripts, demonstrating that the 1.9 kb transcript lacked protein coding sequences contained in exon 12. Similarly, no internal deletions were detected in a panel of malignant human breast tissues using RT-PCR and analogous primers within human MDM2. Therefore, breast tumors differ from other solid tumors reported previously in that no internal deletions of MDM2 protein coding sequences were observed. However, the data document the presence of multiple MDM2 mRNA transcripts in both normal and malignant breast tissues. A subset of MDM2 transcripts were shown to lack the last exon which contains sequences coding for the RING and zinc fingers and domains which are targets for caspase-3 mediated proteolytic degradation and are required to target p53 for proteosomal degradation.
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PMID:Expression of MDM2 during mammary tumorigenesis. 1018 33

The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21/waf1 is regulated by p53-dependent and p53-independent pathways. In addition, mdm2 is an oncogene which forms an auto-regulatory loop with the normal p53 protein and its role has been implicated in oncogenesis. To determine whether a correlation exists between the expression of these gene products, tumor differentiation, tumor staging and radiation therapy, we investigated the expression of p21, p53 and mdm2, and cellular proliferation by Ki-67 (MIB1) labeling index using immunohistochemistry in 88 human oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) samples from 56 patients. Tumor expression of all nuclear proteins was scored according to the percentage of positive cancer nuclei, both with the cancer tissue as a whole as well as in different epithelial compartments of differentiation. Positive p21, p53, mdm2 and MIB1 staining was present in 82.4, 67.8, 25.9 and 98.8% of the SCC samples. The staining in different epithelial compartments of differentiation varied: those of p21 and mdm2 present predominantly in suprabasal and upper regions of the tumors: those of p53 and MIB1 in basal and suprabasal regions. Higher levels of p21 expression were seen in actively proliferating tumors (P = 0.025). p21 expression positively correlated with mdm2 expression but not with p53 expression. Moreover, the level of p21 expression was higher in older patients (P = 0.024) and female patients (P = 0.008). There was no significant association among p53, mdm2 and MIB1. Expression of p53 was higher in tumors with poorer cellular differentiation and in younger patients (P = 0.038 and 0.028). There was no association between tumor stage by TNM classification and the expression of any of these gene products or proliferation index. Radiation therapy did not alter the expression of any of these. To conclude, p21 protein was overexpressed in oral SCCs, and this overexpression was related to cell proliferation index and mdm2 expression but independent of p53 protein alteration. Overexpression of p21 alone appeared to be insufficient to suppress tumor progression.
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PMID:Expression of p21/waf1 in oral squamous cell carcinomas--correlation with p53 and mdm2 and cellular proliferation index. 1021 12

To broaden the knowledge of myxoid morphology in liposarcoma, eight cases of unusual liposarcoma with combined well-differentiated and myxoid malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH)-like myxoid areas are reported. The tumors arose as huge retroperitoneal masses in elderly patients, except for one that occurred in the spermatic cord. Three cases had local recurrences, and one of the seven patients who were followed up had died of the tumor. Grossly, the tumors were mostly confluent and multinodular and showed a glistening myxoid appearance in variable proportions, which merged gradually into or were juxtaposed to yellow fatty or sclerotic whitish areas. Microscopically, in addition to areas of well-differentiated lipoma-like or sclerosing liposarcoma, all the tumors contained myxoid portions characterized by scattered multinucleated or bizarre giant cells and a prominent plexiform vascular pattern that resembled myxoid MFH or myxofibrosarcoma. The myxoid areas were associated with discernible lipogenesis. High-grade dedifferentiation was present in one tumor. Cytogenetically, in one case, the myxoid lesion had nonrandom chromosomal aberrations, such as ring and marker chromosomes, characteristic of a well-differentiated variant of liposarcoma. In a nested reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis using archival paraffin-embedded tissue, it was seen that none of the eight tumors with myxoid MFH-like features had TLS/FUS-CHOP fusion transcripts characteristic of myxoid and round cell liposarcomas. These clinicopathologic and molecular features suggest that the current myxoid tumors are more closely related to well-differentiated liposarcoma rather than to ordinary myxoid liposarcoma despite their unequivocal myxoid morphology. Missense point mutations of the p53 gene were detected in two (25%) cases by single-strand conformation polymorphism and sequence analyses. Immunohistochemical expressions of p53 and mdm2 were observed in 75% of the cases, in which immunoreactive tumor cells were seen more often in the myxoid MFH-like areas. Thus, altered p53 pathways, such as p53 gene mutation and mdm2-mediated inactivation of p53, may play a pathogenetic role in this form of tumor progression showing myxoid MFH-like morphology in liposarcoma, as has been suggested in dedifferentiated liposarcoma.
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PMID:Retroperitoneal liposarcoma with combined well-differentiated and myxoid malignant fibrous histiocytoma-like myxoid areas. 1058 1

TP53 and MDM2 genes and their protein expression were evaluated in frozen and paraffin-embedded tissue from 27 patients with malignant fibrous histiocytoma to elucidate the relationship between them, their implication in tumor progression mechanisms and their possible diagnostic-prognostic value in malignant fibrous histiocytoma. Single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and direct sequencing of polymerase chain reaction-amplified DNA were used to establish two TP53 mutations (7.4%): a point mutation and a 63-bp duplication. Amplification of the MDM2 gene was observed in two tumors (7.4%) by means of Southern-blot analysis, one of them also carrying the TP53 point mutation. Immunohistochemical and Western-blot techniques were used to study nuclear accumulation of p53 and mdm2 proteins: 11 cases (40.7%) with p53 protein expression and thirteen cases (48.1%) with mdm2 protein expression were detected. We confirmed overexpression of mdm2 protein in eight of ten cases (80%) with p53 protein expression without TP53 gene mutation. Statistical analysis shows that simultaneous co-expression of p53 and mdm2 in malignant fibrous histiocytoma is significantly correlated with survival in absence of gene alteration in contrast to the lack of statistical correlation with survival of p53 protein expression alone.
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PMID:Analysis of p53 and mdm2 proteins in malignant fibrous histiocytoma in absence of gene alteration: prognostic significance. 1062 2

The present study was designed to analyze the expression of p53 and mdm2 in clear cell renal cell carcinoma with special emphasis on their association with tumor grade and clinical outcome. In particular, the value of individual protein overexpression as well as combined p53/mdm2 positivity was evaluated because both proteins are functionally connected, and their expression is controlled by an autoregulatory feedback loop. A cohort of 97 clear cell renal cell carcinomas was analyzed. The overexpression of mdm2 and p53 proteins was investigated on paraffin-embedded material by using monoclonal antibodies. Eighteen tumors showed mdm2 positivity, whereas 35 of the tumors overexpressed p53. Whereas p53 and mdm2 positivity correlated significantly (P = 0.00004), no correlation could be found between mdm2 protein overexpression and tumor stage, lymph node involvement, and presence of distant metastases. mdm2 positivity was found significantly more frequently in tumors of higher grade. In univariate analysis, there was a statistically significant correlation between p53 and mdm2 overexpression in the same tumor and poor survival (P = 0.00179). Multivariate analysis revealed that coincident mdm2/p53 overexpression, the presence of distant metastases, and tumor grade were independent predictors for tumor progression. Our results indicate that mdm2/p53 co-overexpression, nuclear grade, and preoperative presence of distant metastasis are independent predictors for poor survival.
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PMID:mdm2 expression as a prognostic indicator in clear cell renal cell carcinoma: comparison with p53 overexpression and clinicopathological parameters. 1081 6

Apoptosis--the programmed sell death is the process of characteristic events on morphological, biochemical and molecular level which lead consequently to cell death. This process require activation of some genes i.e. p-53, mdm2 and inhibiting others i.e. bcl-2. Sixty patients with laryngeal cancer treated in ENT Department of Medical Academy of Lodz were analysed. Expression of the p-53 and bcl-2 genes' products was examined by means immunohistochemical techniques carried out on laryngeal cancer paraffin samples. Above-mentioned markers were correlated with: stage of cancer progression, recurrences and metastasis of laryngeal cancer and follow-up of the patients. Initial results indicate the possible utilisation of apoptosis as prognostic factors for the patients with laryngeal cancer.
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PMID:[Programmed cell death research in laryngeal cancer]. 1097 88


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