Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the last ten years considerable progress has been made in small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) biology, along with the technical progress made in molecular biology. This progress now allows us to propose a model for the genesis and the development of this type of tumor. Tobacco, the principal causal factor plays a dual role. In bringing about secretion of growth factors by the bronchial epithelia, usually involved in the normal development of lungs, and by functioning autocrinally and paracrinally, it facilitates the occurrence of mitotic mutations. Without directly contributing to cellular transformation, this autocrine functioning also gives a selective advantage to cells going through transformation or immortalization. The procarcinogenic or carcinogenic agents contained in tobacco smoke, whose level of production could be genetically determined, would also contribute to the accumulation of mutations affecting both suppressor genes and oncogenes. Two tumour suppressor genes have been identified: RB1 and P53. At least one other putative tumour suppressor gene has constantly been implied. It lies on the short arm of chromosome 3. There could also be the possibility of detecting subjects susceptible to developing an SCLC, a functional hemizygote still needing evaluation. The activated oncogenes principally belongs to the myc family. Their activation could correspond with the appearance of cellular clones having aggressive behavior independent of growth factors, chemoresistant and more metastatic. SCLC may be distinguished from other malignant lung tumors by a fairly characteristic pattern consisting of the loss of suppressor genes and the activation of oncogenes. The links between the neuroendocrine properties of this type of tumor and its characteristic description are being clarified and will contribute to a better understanding of the relationship between the different types of lung tumors. From this biologic knowledge follow several therapeutic applications under investigation (blocking autocrine loop through anti-GRP antibodies), as well as potential applications (concerning the products of suppressor genes) and possible applications such as prevention oriented towards detection of high-risk subjects.
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PMID:[Biology of small-cell bronchogenic carcinoma: recent advances]. 132 50

The biologic behavior of invasive pituitary adenomas is poorly understood and appears to be intermediate between intrasellar adenomas and pituitary carcinoma. Utilizing immunohistochemistry on tissue sections, we examined 10 invasive pituitary adenomas involving the sphenoid sinus with a panel of cellular and molecular markers and compared the results with 10 noninvasive pituitary adenomas and five normal pituitary glands. The panel included Ki-67 and PCNA (proliferation cell nuclear antigen), cell proliferation indicators; interleukin 6 (IL-6), a multifunctional cytokine; heat shock protein 27 (HSP 27), a stress response protein; and p53, a tumor suppressor gene product. We found strong expression of IL-6 in normal pituitary glands, 20% of noninvasive and 50% of invasive adenomas. HSP 27 was absent in normal glands and present in 10% of noninvasive and 50% of invasive adenomas. The Ki-67 and PCNA proliferation index was above normal but was essentially the same in the two groups. p53 was not detected in any specimens. We propose that both IL-6 and HSP 27 may be markers of biologic aggression in pituitary adenomas.
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PMID:Biologic markers of invasive pituitary adenomas involving the sphenoid sinus. 777 77

We investigated the correlation of p53 abnormalities with survival in 85 patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who had undergone resection with curative intent as part of Lung Cancer Study Group (LCSG) 871. Our previous studies showed that only a subset of p53 mutations in lung cancers result in overexpression. In addition, protein overexpression has been described in the absence of mutation. Therefore, we determined both p53 protein overexpression (by immunostaining) and p53 and ras gene mutations (by single-strand conformation polymorphism and DNA sequencing) in this set of resected tumor specimens. Clinical follow-up data were available for 75 cases. Of the studied patients, 64% showed p53 overexpression and 51% had mutant p53 sequences; however, the concordance rate was only 67%. There was a negative survival correlation with positive p53 immunostaining (p = 0.05), but not with the presence of gene mutations (p = 0.62) in this group of patients. Overexpression of p53 protein determined by immunostaining may contribute to adverse outcome due to the ability of p53 to act as a dominant oncogene, or alternatively, overexpression may reflect ongoing DNA damage in the tumor as a marker for a more aggressive behavior. When adjusted for stage, age, and gender by multivariate analysis, however, there was no independent impact of p53 overexpression on survival.
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PMID:p53 immunostaining positivity is associated with reduced survival and is imperfectly correlated with gene mutations in resected non-small cell lung cancer. A preliminary report of LCSG 871. 798 68

A 27-year-old man was treated for an aggressive cerebellar medulloblastoma that, at operation, exhibited dural invasion. Six months after gross total resection and radiation therapy, a "surgical metastasis" developed in the lower portion of the surgical scar. The tumor grew rapidly down into the right side of his neck. Chemotherapy failed, and he subsequently died. Cytogenetic and molecular genetic studies revealed multiple numeric and structural chromosome abnormalities, including an abnormal chromosome 17p arm, more than 100-fold N-myc amplification, a rearranged c-myc gene, and a 16-base pair deletion involving exon 7 of the p53 gene. We postulate that these genetic features may have contributed to the aggressive behavior of the tumor.
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PMID:Aggressive medulloblastoma with high-level N-myc amplification. 817 Jan 80

Intranuclear p53 accumulation is a common finding in many different human tumors and is associated with a worse prognosis in breast, colon, and lung carcinomas. We immunostained a series of common epithelial ovarian cancers to assess (1) the prevalence of p53 accumulation and its clinicopathologic correlations, and (2) its prognostic implications. The study population comprised 98 patients (83 with follow-up data). A variable degree of p53 immunoreactivity, strictly confined to the neoplastic cells, was detected in 54 tumors (55%). Among these tumors there were 10 low expressors (1% to 10% immunoreactive tumor cells), 16 moderate expressors (10% to 50% immunoreactive cells), and 28 high expressors (> 50% immunoreactive cells). The prevalence of p53 immunoreactivity did not show any association with the histologic type of the tumors or with the disease stage at presentation. p53 Accumulation, however, was significantly more prevalent among poorly differentiated tumors (P = .0059, by analysis of variance). Life table analysis demonstrated that patients with tumors showing moderate and high p53 expression had worse disease-free and adjusted lengths of survival (P = .0011 and P = .0025, respectively, by Mantel-Cox). The patients with "early stage" disease (stages I and II) and p53 accumulation showed a trend toward shorter length of survival, but this did not reach statistical significance. However, patients with "advanced stage" disease (stages III and IV) and moderate or high p53 accumulation had a poorer prognosis (P = .0154 and P = .0171, for disease-free and adjusted length of survival, respectively). These results suggest that p53 accumulation occurs more frequently in tumors with aggressive behavior and that p53 immunoreactivity may have a prognostic role in certain subsets of patients with ovarian carcinoma.
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PMID:p53 accumulation in ovarian carcinomas and its prognostic implications. 824 17

Mutations in the p53 tumour suppressor gene are amongst the most frequent genetic abnormalities acquired in tumours. Recent studies in vitro suggest that mutant p53 destabilises the genome and facilitates development of aneuploidy. Here, in a study of 83 colorectal carcinomas, we demonstrate that alterations in p53 (detected by immunocytochemical stabilisation) precede and apparently facilitate divergence of aneuploid sub-clones. Aneuploidy in these tumours (but not those with normal p53) is predominantly in the subtetraploid range, suggesting that endoreduplication is important in its origin. This association with a specific phase of carcinoma progression is not shared by other commonly acquired genetic abnormalities in these tumours. These observations highlight the critical role of p53 in the regulation of abnormal chromosome replication and afford an explanation for the association between p53 abnormalities, aneuploidy and biological aggression in cancer.
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PMID:Stabilised p53 facilitates aneuploid clonal divergence in colorectal cancer. 847 57

A case of glomangiosarcoma (GS) arising on the lateral side of the left upper arm is reported here. GS is very rare compared with benign glomus tumor (GT) and there has been some controversy regarding whether it is a true malignant tumor. Histologically, the tumor consisted of two different components. In the periphery of the tumor, a solid sheet-like growth of small cuboidal cells identical to benign GT was seen. However, in the central portion, the tumor was composed of short spindle cells with hyperchromatic atypical nuclei arranged in weak fascicles, mimicking leiomyosarcoma. Mitotic figures were not uncommon in the latter area. Immunohistochemistry revealed that both cuboidal and spindle-shaped tumor cells were positive for vimentin and muscle actin as were cells of other benign GTs used for controls. In addition, only spindle-shaped cells expressed protein produced by the suppressive oncogene p53 in the nuclei, a phenomenon not seen in the five benign GTs or in cuboidal cells of GS. These results suggest that GS may exhibit more aggressive behavior than benign GT.
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PMID:A case of glomangiosarcoma. 860 44

Neuroendocrine tumors of lung, including typical carcinoid (TC), atypical carcinoid (AC), large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC), and small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) constitute a spectrum of malignancies in which the pathologist at times has difficulty in discerning tumor subtype and aggressiveness in a reproducible fashion. Therefore, 59 primary neuroendocrine lung tumors including 10 TCs, 26 ACs, 15 LCNECs, and 8 SCLCs were selected from cases collected from 1976 to 1988 and immunostained for p53 protein. All of these tumors were also genotyped for specific point mutational damage affecting p53 (exons 5, 7, and 8; with ACs additionally sequenced for p53 exon 6); 13 tumors for K-ras-2 (exon 1); and 31 tumors for c-raf-1 (exon 15) growth-regulatory genes. Genotyping was performed on topographically selected, minute tumor samples removed from unstained formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections (topographic genotyping) using polymerase chain reaction and direct sequencing. The distribution of p53 immunohistochemical staining had four patterns: negative in TCs, one-half of ACs, 3 of 15 LCNECs, and 1 of 8 SCLCs; less than 10% but more than five tumor cells per 10 high power fields (focal) in a subset (7 of 26) of aggressive ACs; 10 to 49% of tumor cells (patchy) in a subset (6 of 26) of ACs with a higher grade of aggressiveness; and 50 to 100% of tumor cells (diffuse), exclusively seen in LCNECs (12 of 15) and SCLCs (7 of 8). Three patterns of immunohistochemical staining intensity of p53 protein were seen: negative, weak or mild, and moderate to marked. SCLCs and LCNECs accounted for cases of moderate to marked staining and were the only ones to have mutations in p53 exons 5, 7, or 8. No mutations were found in AC and TC, showing absent to weak staining and no staining, respectively. The difference in distribution and staining intensities between LCNEC and SCLC compared with AC and TC was statistically significant (P < 0.001). Patients having AC with patchy p53 immunostaining usually had survival limited to 3 years, whereas those having AC with focal p53 immunostaining subsequently developed metastatic or recurrence of AC disease (P < 0.05). The absence of point mutations in cases with patchy or focal immunostaining suggests increased expression of wild-type p53 tumor suppressor protein likely in response to growth deregulation in a more aggressive subtype of AC. A novel hypothesis is presented in regard to these findings. K-ras-2 and c-raf-1 gene sequence analysis showed no evidence of point mutational change in any of the tumors studied. The TC and AC categories are therefore genetically distinct from the higher grade neuroendocrine SCLC and LCNEC. Immunohistochemistry for p53 on AC lung tumors may be helpful to delineate cases at higher risk for aggressive behavior. Additionally, although LCNEC is categorized as a non-small-cell carcinoma, it is more akin genetically and immunohistochemically to SCLC.
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PMID:Analysis of p53, K-ras-2, and C-raf-1 in pulmonary neuroendocrine tumors. Correlation with histological subtype and clinical outcome. 862 22

Olfactory neuroblastoma (ONB) is a rare neuroectodermal tumor whose clinical course is not effectively predicted by initial stage or grade; p53 tumor suppressor gene alterations have not been determined concerning the ONB pathobiology and recurrence. We analyzed 18 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded ONB specimens (12 primary tumors and six recurrences or metastases) from 14 patients for p53 alterations using immunohistochemistry for p53 and WAF1 together with topographic genotyping (selection of minute tissue targets from unstained sections, PCR [polymerase chain reaction] amplification of exons 5-8 followed by direct DNA sequencing). Sequential material representing tumor recurrence or metastasis was available in four cases to compare genetic alterations over time in the same patient. None of the cases showed strong, diffuse p53 immunostaining. Focal weak to moderate intensity staining was evident in nine of 14 cases. Mutations in p53 were not detected in any of the cases, suggesting hyperexpression of p53 wild-type protein. Hyperexpression was further confirmed by correlation of WAF-1 and p53 immunopositivity. Importantly, in four cases with recurrence or metastasis, tumors manifested p53 wild-type hyperexpression. It appears that p53 point mutation does not play an important role in the initial development of ONB; however, p53 wild-type hyperexpression may occur in subsets of ONB likely to show local aggressive behavior and a tendency for recurrence. Wild-type p53 hyperexpression may be an important event in later stages of ONB growth and progression.
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PMID:Relationship of p53 gene alterations with tumor progression and recurrence in olfactory neuroblastoma. 865 51

Although most pituitary tumors are well differentiated, histologically benign neoplasms, their clinical behavior is known to vary greatly. These lesions are relentlessly aggressive in some instances yet biologically indolent in others, but these prognostically relevant differences in behavior are not reflected in their histopathological appearance. As a means of identifying intrinsically aggressive pituitary tumors, we evaluated 70 pituitary adenomas and 7 primary pituitary carcinomas for their expression of the p53 gene product, a nuclear phosphoprotein whose immunohistochemical accumulation has served as an unfavorable prognostic factor for a wide range of human neoplasms. All tumors were fully classified by immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy; adenomas were further stratified on the basis of their invasion status, the latter being defined as gross operatively or radiologically apparent infiltration of dura or bone. Conclusive nuclear immunopositivity for p53 was identified in a total of 12 tumors, all being either invasive adenomas or primary pituitary carcinomas. A clear and highly significant association was evident between p53 expression and tumor behavior, as the proportion of p53-positive cases among noninvasive adenomas, invasive adenomas, and pituitary carcinomas was 0, 15.2, and 100%, respectively (chi 2 = 44.72; degrees of freedom, 2; P << 0.001). A comparison of previously reported growth fraction data with p53 expression indicated that the mean Ki-67-derived growth fraction of p53-positive tumors was significantly higher than that of p53-negative tumors (10.41 +/- 2.20 versus 2.51 +/- 0.28%) (+/- standard error of the mean, two-sample t test for independent samples, P = 0.004). There was no apparent relationship between the functional status of the tumor and p53 expression; positivity was observed among somatotroph, lactotroph, corticotroph, and clinically nonfunctioning pituitary tumors. These data indicate that p53 expression, when conclusively present in pituitary tumors, may be of some diagnostic usefulness as a marker of biologically aggressive behavior.
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PMID:p53 expression in pituitary adenomas and carcinomas: correlation with invasiveness and tumor growth fractions. 869 97


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