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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
p53
was originally considered to be a nuclear oncogene, but several convergent lines of research have indicated that the wild-type gene functions as a tumor suppressor gene negatively regulating the cell cycle. Mutations in the
p53
gene have been detected in many tumor types and seem to be the most common genetic alterations in human cancer. In this preliminary study, sera of 92 patients (pts) with breast disease were analyzed for the presence of the mutant p53 protein (mp53) with a selective immunoenzyme assay employing a monoclonal antibody (PAb 240) specific for the majority of mammalian m
p53
but not for the wild-type protein. Of the 10 patients with benign breast disease, only two (20%) showed detectable m
p53
levels in the serum. In the
breast cancer
group, sera from 7 of the 30 pts (23%) without lymph node involvement were positive for m
p53
, as were 7 out of the 45 pts (15%) with metastatic lymph nodes and 1 out of the 7 pts (14%) with disseminated disease. The specificity of m
p53
assay evaluated in 20 healthy controls was 100%. These preliminary results showed that serum positivity for m
p53
is not related to breast disease extension. Further studies to assess the utility of m
p53
as a possible prognosis factor in
breast cancer
are currently in progress.
...
PMID:The p53 tumor suppressor gene. A preliminary clinical study in breast cancer patients. 128 28
Overexpression of
p53
-protein appears to be a common event in primary
breast cancer
. It has been proposed that the presence of elevated levels of this protein may be an independent prognostic factor and may be important for the ability of a tumor to metastasize. This study was performed to evaluate the influence of immunohistochemically detectable mutant p53-protein on metastasis-free survival of patients with
breast cancer
. Immunohistochemistry was performed on 117 paraffin-embedded biopsy specimens of consecutive patients with stage T1-T4
breast cancer
, using a monoclonal antibody against
p53
suppressor gene product. 29 (24.8%) specimens showed positive staining, whereas in 88 (75.2%) a negative staining reaction for
p53
was found. Comparing time intervals to diagnosis of metastasis, using Kaplan-Meier curves, Log-Rank test revealed no significant differences in metastasis-free survival between
p53
positive and negative patients (P = 0.32), whereas statistically significant differences were noted for tumor stage (P < 0.01), nodal status (P < 0.01), histological grading (P < 0.01) and estrogen receptor status (P = 0.03). Mutant p53-protein, as detected by immunohistochemistry in paraffin embedded tumor tissue, does not appear to influence metastasis-free survival in patients with
breast cancer
.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of mutant p53-suppressor gene product in patients with breast cancer: influence on metastasis-free survival. 129 80
Multiple genome alterations can be seen within a tumor and continue to accumulate throughout development of the growth. Chromosome deletions occurring in tumors are generating much interest. To date, the best known model is retinoblastoma whose study gave rise to the concepts of anti-oncogene or tumor suppressor gene. Studies of genetic anomalies in colorectal tumors have led to an elegant model of colonic carcinogenesis in which multiple steps, each with its corresponding genetic anomaly, successively accumulate, with deletion of the
p53
gene occurring as a late event. Successive anomalies of the
p53
gene (mutations, deletions) occur during passage from a low-grade astrocytoma to a higher-grade astrocytoma. Studies of familial forms of
breast cancer
and of breast and ovarian cancer have also provided insight into the biology of these tumors, with the identification of a predisposing chromosomal area whose location is 17 q-12-21. These approaches open up possibilities for screening techniques and use of preventive treatments in highly selected patients. However they raise many ethical problems. There is a need for developing a charter for these family studies in the near future.
...
PMID:[Genetics and cancers]. 130 91
The etiology of cancer is a complex interplay of various factors, including genetic alterations. Multiple studies have been carried out to identify and characterize mutations that frequently occur during tumorigenesis. In human
breast cancer
, amplification of proto-oncogenes (c-myc, c-erbB-2/neu) and chromosome 11q13, mutation of
p53
and loss of heterozygosity (chromosomes 1, 3p, 6q, 7q, 11p, 13q, 16q, 17, 18q and 22q) represent the major types of genetic abnormalities that have been frequently observed in tumor DNAs. The genetic deletions and mutations could inactivate tumor-suppressor genes. In some studies, specific alterations have been associated with some clinical parameters. Recently, linkage analyses, on large families with a predisposition to
breast cancer
, have been performed to map putative
breast cancer
susceptibility genes. The survey of high risk patients should be organised to make an earlier diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Molecular analysis of breast cancers: recent developments]. 130 32
We have examined breast tumour samples from 109 unselected
breast cancer
patients for genetic changes on chromosomes 13 and 17. We have looked for allelic losses, firstly, at the retinoblastoma locus, RB1, on chromosome 13q, and secondly, on both arms of chromosome 17. We have also studied the same samples for amplification of the erbB2 oncogene. We searched for mutations in four well conserved areas of the
p53
gene using constant denaturant gradient electrophoresis (CDGE). Allelic loss or rearrangement was detected in a large proportion of the tumours, affecting 37-51% of cases with different probes. The areas most frequently affected were 17p13.1 and 17p13.3. Point mutations and small deletions in the
p53
gene on 17p13.1 were detected in 16% of the tumours. The data on genetic changes were then analyzed for three different correlations: 1) co-operation between different lesions, 2) association with family history of
breast cancer
, 3) correlation with clinical factors and prognosis. There was association between losses at the retinoblastoma locus and losses on 17p and 17q. We also found an association between
p53
mutations and amplification of the erbB2 oncogene. Relatives of patients having deletions at the retinoblastoma locus and/or sites on chromosome 17 in the tumours have a significantly increased relative risk of developing
breast cancer
. No such correlation is found for
p53
mutations or erbB2 amplification. No
p53
germline mutations were detected.
P53
mutations do, however, appear to be a strong indication of poor prognosis in this population.
...
PMID:Genetic changes in breast carcinomas in an Icelandic population. 130 32
A predisposition to the development of certain specific and familial cancers is associated with the inheritance of a single mutated gene. In the best-characterized cases, this primary mutation is a loss of function mutation consistent with viability but resulting in neoplastic change consequent to the acquisition of a second somatic mutation at the same locus. Such genes are referred to as tumor-suppressor genes. Classical examples are the Rb-1 gene associated with the development of retinoblastoma and the
p53
gene, which is associated with a wider range of neoplasms, including
breast cancer
. Other tumor-suppressor genes have been isolated which are associated with Wilms' tumor, neurofibromatosis, and inherited and sporadic forms of colorectal cancer. Some of these genes appear to act as negative regulators of mitotic cycle genes, and others may have different properties. The nature of these genes is discussed, as is the evidence for the involvement of tumor-suppressor genes in other inherited, and sporadic, forms of cancer. Some recent data on the Wilms' tumor gene, WT1, and on the involvement of the
p53
gene in
breast cancer
are presented, and the importance of genomic imprinting in contributing to the excess of suppressor gene mutations in chromosomes of paternal origin is considered.
...
PMID:Tumor-suppressor genes: cardinal factors in inherited predisposition to human cancers. 133 26
Mutations in the
p53
gene are the commonest specific genetic change in human cancer. In normal tissues,
p53 protein
is present in such low quantities that it is not readily detectable by immunochemical techniques. However, in many tumour cells large amounts of
p53 protein
accumulate and can be seen by simple immunohistochemical staining; this is generally attributed to the accumulation of stabilised, mutant protein. We have found a mother and daughter, who both have a history of
breast cancer
, who show strong immunohistochemical staining of
p53
in most of their normal epithelial and mesenchymal cells. Their family has a history of multiple cancers developing at an early age. Detailed protein analysis and gene sequencing of material obtained from cultured cells, grown from a skin biopsy taken from the daughter, suggest that her cells contained large quantities of normal (unmutated)
p53
. We suggest that this phenotype defines a new inherited cancer susceptibility syndrome that is distinct from the germ-line mutations in
p53
found in some Li-Fraumeni families. This new syndrome affects
p53
tumour suppressor function through an indirect mechanism that stabilises normal
p53
. It remains to be established whether this mechanism also contributes to the accumulation of
p53
in sporadic cancers.
...
PMID:Abnormal expression of wild type p53 protein in normal cells of a cancer family patient. 135 90
Twenty-seven cases of inflammatory breast cancer were screened for the presence of the
p53 protein
by immunocytochemical methods using a monoclonal antibody directed against the
p53 protein
. Three groups were detected: 8 cases (30%) had high levels of
p53
in the nucleus of the cancer cells; 9 cases (33%) had a complete lack of detectable staining; 10 cases (37%) showed a pattern of cytoplasmic staining with nuclear sparing. Nucleotide sequence analysis of
p53
cDNAs derived from the samples with cytoplasmic staining revealed only wild-type
p53
alleles in 6 out of 7 cases. An eighth case was determined to be wild type by a single-strand conformation polymorphism. In contrast, the samples containing nuclear
p53
contained a variety of missense mutations and a nonsense mutation. The
p53
cDNAs from 3 of the tumors that lacked detectable
p53
staining were analyzed, and all 3 had wild-type nucleotide sequences. Interestingly, a case of normal lactating breast tissue also showed intense cytoplasmic staining for
p53
with nuclear sparing. These data suggest that some breast cancers that contain the wild-type form of
p53 protein
may inactivate its tumor-suppressing activity by sequestering this protein in the cytoplasm, away from its site of action in the cell nucleus. The detection of cytoplasmic
p53
in normal lactating breast tissue could suggest that this is the mechanism employed in specific physiological situations to permit transient cell proliferation. This observation could explain how some
breast cancer
tissues inactivate
p53
function without mutation.
...
PMID:Two distinct mechanisms alter p53 in breast cancer: mutation and nuclear exclusion. 135 91
The expression of
p53 protein
, oestrogen receptor protein, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and overexpression of the c-erbB-2 oncoprotein was examined in a series of 149 primary symptomatic breast carcinomas. Expression of
p53
was present in 62 of 146 cases (42.5%) of the invasive carcinoma and one of three cases (33.3%) of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) examined. Statistical associations of tumour oestrogen receptor positivity and lack of
p53 protein
expression, chi 2 = 19.78 (d.f. = 1), P less than 0.001, positive tumour
p53
status and poor tumour grade; chi 2 = 14.1 (d.f. = 2), P less than 0.001, EGFR expression chi 2 = 7.07, (d.f. = 1), P less than 0.01 and tumour c-erbB-2 protein overexpression; chi 2 = 4.61 (d.f. = 1), P = 0.032 were identified. Expression of
p53
is rare in invasive lobular carcinoma of classical type (8.3% of cases examined) in contrast to other common types of mammary carcinoma. Non-significant trends of
p53 protein
expression and increased regional tumour recurrence; chi 2 = 3.20 (d.f. = 1), P = 0.074 and also poorer patient survival; chi 2 = 3.76 (d.f. = 1), P = 0.053 were identified.
p53 protein
expression is a common event in human
breast cancer
and is present in both DCIS and invasive mammary carcinoma. Abnormal expression of
p53 protein
is a feature of both in situ and invasive breast carcinoma, implying that the abnormal
p53 protein
expression may be implicated in the early stages of mammary carcinoma progression.
...
PMID:p53 protein expression in human breast carcinoma: relationship to expression of epidermal growth factor receptor, c-erbB-2 protein overexpression, and oestrogen receptor. 135 62
Receptor status, proliferative activity, loss of differentiation, inactivation of tumor suppressor genes, and overexpression of oncogenes are related events that may affect the prognosis of patients with
breast cancer
. Ninety-seven unselected breast carcinomas were immunostained for estrogen and progesterone receptors, Ki-67 proliferation-associated antigen,
p53 tumor suppressor
gene product (p53), and c-erbB-2 protein. Immunohistochemical results and clinical data were compared. Altered p53 expression (regarded as indirect indication of inactivating gene alterations) was found in 25.8% of cases and was associated with a high Ki-67 labeling index, high mitotic count, and high histologic grade, with c-erbB-2 overexpression, and with negative estrogen and progesterone receptor status. p53 immunostaining could be found also in cytologic samples and correlated with p53 immunoreactivity on frozen sections of the corresponding tumors. c-erbB-2 protein overexpression was seen in 24.7% of cases and was associated with p53 altered expression and negative receptor status. Double immunohistochemical staining showed p53 and c-erbB-2 immunoreactivity in the same cells. Median and mean +/- standard deviation Ki-67 labeling index values were 15 and 16.32 +/- 10.05, respectively. Ki-67 labeling index was correlated with high mitotic count and was positively associated with histologic grade, negative progesterone receptor status, and p53 expression. Estrogen receptor status was not associated with any histologic or clinical parameters, whereas progesterone receptor status was associated with grading. The direct relation of
p53 protein
alterations with c-erbB-2 overexpression may be interpreted in light of the multistep model of tumor progression. Cases with altered expression of both p53 and c-erbB-2 proteins could be interpreted as having lost one inhibitory control mechanism of cell proliferation and having gained one activator of the malignant potential. However, in comparing cases with the p53 + c-erbB-2 + phenotype with cases showing positivity for only one of these gene products, no association with higher stages was seen. Detection of p53 altered expression on cytologic samples of malignant tumors may have diagnostic relevance, and p53 immunostaining may prove to be an additional diagnostic criterion in cytologic diagnosis.
...
PMID:p53 and c-erbB-2 protein expression in breast carcinomas. An immunohistochemical study including correlations with receptor status, proliferation markers, and clinical stage in human breast cancer. 135 56
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