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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A critical research frontier in head and neck oncology involves defining the use of induction chemotherapy regimens to allow organ preservation and to avoid functionally debilitating surgical resections. Completed clinical trials in
laryngeal cancer
indicate that such an approach is feasible, but progress thus far has been limited by our inability to predict which patients are likely to respond to chemotherapy and preserve their larynx. Mutation of the
p53
tumor-suppressor gene is the most common genetic alteration identified thus far in human cancers, and it may be important in regulation of cell proliferation and chemosensitivity. To determine whether
p53
overexpression predicts chemotherapy response, organ preservation, and survival in patients with advanced
laryngeal cancer
, we analyzed immunohistologic expression of
p53
in tissue sections from 178 patients with advanced
laryngeal cancer
who were entered in the Department of Veterans Affairs
Laryngeal Cancer
Cooperative Study, a multiinstitutional clinical trial comparing induction chemotherapy (cis-platinum and 5-fluorouracil) plus radiation therapy (94 patients) to surgery plus postoperative radiation therapy (84 patients). Larynx preservation was significantly higher in the group of patients whose tumors overexpressed
p53
(74% vs. 52.5%; p = 0.03). The presence of
p53
overexpression did not predict survival in either the surgery or the chemotherapy groups (p = 0.82 and p = 0.53).
...
PMID:Overexpression of p53 predicts organ preservation using induction chemotherapy and radiation in patients with advanced laryngeal cancer. Department of Veterans Affairs Laryngeal Cancer Study Group. 756 13
The objective of this work was an analysis of mutations in the
p53
gene detected from fresh tumor samples of
larynx cancer
patients using single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) and direct DNA sequencing of exons 5-8. From 40 patient samples, 15 showed an extra band in SSCP. In 13 samples mutations were detected in exons 5-8. They constituted six transitions and seven transversions, four of them being T to A transversions. Mutations in codons 205 and 248 occurred in two and in codon 246 in three samples.
Larynx cancer
is strongly associated with tobacco smoking and alcohol consumption. The typical
p53
mutations in lung cancer, G to T transversions and G to A and C to T transitions, associated with smoking, accounted for 46% of the mutations detected. Fifty-four per cent of the mutations were detected in a reported hotspot region covering codons 238-248.
...
PMID:p53 mutations in larynx cancer. 800 Dec 61
Biopsies from 34 patients with cancer of the head, neck or esophagus, 2 laryngeal papillomas, and 2 normal tonsils were analysed for human papillomavirus (HPV), Epstein Barr virus (EBV) genomes and mutated or elevated levels of
p53
. In 4 biopsies
p53
was also analysed by DNA sequencing. HPV type 31 was found in one
laryngeal cancer
with normal
p53
and HPV type 16 in two tonsil cancers with aberrant
p53
expression. EBV was detected by PCR in 11 biopsies, but in situ hybridisation and immunohistochemistry, did not confirm this finding. Aberrant
p53
expression was observed in approximately half of the tumours. These results support the involvement of both aberrant
p53
expression and HPV in the aetiology of squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck.
...
PMID:Involvement of aberrant p53 expression and human papillomavirus in carcinoma of the head, neck and esophagus. 806 97
Cancer is a genetic disease and the development of the techniques of molecular biology in recent 10 years contributed to the new understanding of neoplasmatic process. The mutations of gene
p53
became one of the most common abnormality in human cancer. The aim of this research was to mark
oncoprotein p53
in 120 cases of
larynx cancer
and the correlation of its appearance with clinical and histopathological parameters. The evaluate the degree of immunohistochemical staining of cell nuclei a 5 degree scale was adopted. The positive staining of cell nuclei was observed in 70% of cases. Positive correlations based on a chi-square test was observed between
p53
and T and N as well as between
p53
and the degree of histological differentiation.
...
PMID:[p53 oncogene in the laryngeal cancer]. 904 79
A comparison was performed of staining intensity of immunohistochemical proliferating antigens (
p53
, PCNA, Ki67), DNA flow cytometry and ultrastructure of the carcinoma cells in 120 cases of
laryngeal cancer
. Clinically very advanced tumors were in majority (T3 - 43%, T4 - 18%). A 5 graded scale was adapted to evaluate the level of immunohistochemical staining of the carcinoma cell nuclei. A positive staining was obtained in 70% for
p53
, 57% for Ki67 and in 80(2/3) for PCNA. 62% of the cases were DNA diploid and 38% DNA aneuploid. The DNA diploid carcinomas were accompanied by the enlargement of the cell nuclei, preserving of the nuclei's wide margins of heterochromatine, enlargement of the nuclear area and increase of the number of nuclei. In the aneuploid-polyploid cancer the nuclei had a substantial polymorphism with large cleaved nuclei and with significant variation in size, and with nuclear envelope. A frequent finding was euchromatization of chromatine. Dense chromatine appeared in the form of small clumps spread over the whole area of these irregular nuclei. Enlargement and activation of nucleoli occurred. There was a positive correlation (Chi-square) between T- and N-stage and immunohistochemical staining. There was also a positive correlation in staining intensity between
p53
, Ki67 and PCNA. There is also strong correlation between these markers of proliferative activity and the degree of aggressiveness of the tumour.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic and prognostic value of p53 oncogene and the selected neoplastic markers (Ki67, PCNA, DNA ploidy) of the ultrastructure in patients with laryngeal cancer]. 917 91
Chemical influences, mainly heavy tobacco smoking, chewing snuff, excessive alcohol consumption, and some occupational hazards, are known to be important etiologic factors in laryngeal carcinogenesis. The synergistic or cooperative interaction of human papilloma virus (HPV) infection with these chemical factors are serious considerations in the development of laryngeal carcinoma. With the development during the last decade of Southern blot hybridization and polymerase chain reaction (PCR), extensive and comprehensive studies have been conducted to determine the presence and biological (etiologic) significance of HPV. Developed cancer, as well as juvenile and adult multiple and single papilloma of the larynx, have been the subject of clinical and molecular-pathological investigation. Our previous study showed that cancer may develop on the basis of leukoplakia and adult-onset papilloma. Extensive kilocytes, an indication of HPV infection, can be seen by histological examination in papillomas and carcinoma. Literary data suggest that in laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma, including varicoses carcinoma, HPV 16, HPV 18, and HPV 33 DNA have been detected. Both in juvenile and adult-onset respiratory papillomatosis, patients could have either HPV type 6 or 11 DNA sequences. Molecular biological and PCR studies indicate that HPV may play an etiologic role in the development of human malignancies of the upper aerodigestive tract and uterine (cervical) origin. However, evidence that unequivocally links HPV infection with laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma is still lacking. In
laryngeal cancer
,
p53
abnormalities are related to smoking-induced mutagenesis rather than HPV. Studies have postulated an interaction between HPV infection and chemical carcinogens and have concluded that HPV possibly are co-adjuvants during the multistage process of neoplastic transformation.
...
PMID:Some etio-pathogenetic factors in laryngeal carcinogenesis. 921 6
The MDM-2 gene encodes for a nuclear phosphoprotein that binds
p53
and inhibits its ability to activate transcription by concealing the
p53
activation domain. It has been suggested that MDM-2 overexpression might represent an alternative mechanism by which
p53
-mediated pathways are inactivated in human tumors. MDM-2 overexpression can be detected by immunohistochemical analysis as a result of gene amplification and/or increased mRNA expression. We studied MDM-2 gene amplification and protein overexpression in 46 and 50 cases, respectively, of laryngeal squamous cell carcinomas previously analyzed for
p53
gene alterations. Not one of the cases showed MDM-2 gene amplification, whereas MDM-2 nuclear immunoreactivity was found in 17 tumors (34%). In 10 of these, coexpression of
p53 protein
was detectable in the absence of gene mutations in exons 5 through 9 (P = .03). Likewise, MDM-2 was also overexpressed in 18 (46%) of 39 morphologically normal mucosa samples, 15 (50%) of 30 preneoplastic lesions, and 9 (40%) of 22 cases of severe dysplasia. Finally, we found no significant correlations between MDM-2 expression (neither per se nor in association with wild-type or mutated
p53
), and the evaluated clinicopathologic parameters of histologic grade, lymph node status, or clinical stage. Our results suggest that MDM-2 gene amplification might not occur in laryngeal carcinomas and that MDM-2 protein overexpression might represent an alternative mechanism by which
p53
is inactivated in the early stages of
laryngeal cancer
tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:MDM-2 oncoprotein overexpression in laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma: association with wild-type p53 accumulation. 926 20
Matrix metalloproteinases are believed to play an important role in tumor progression, invasion and metastasis. In order to investigate if the expression of stromelysin-3 (ST3) mRNA could add prognostic information concerning invasive
laryngeal cancer
and/or be indicative of a high risk for tumor progression in laryngeal dysplasias ST3 expression was analyzed by in situ hybridisation of formalin fixed paraffin embedded laryngeal specimens. Furthermore, all specimens underwent image cytometry (ICM) DNA analysis, and,
p53
immunostaining. Invasive epithelial cancer, both localized (T1, T2) cancers, cured, as well as not cured, by radiotherapy, and cases with regional lymph node metastases were studied. Furthermore, high grade and low grade dysplasias, selected for rapid, slow and non-progression, as well as non-neoplastic inflammatory lesions were investigated. Expression of the ST3 gene was found in 9 out of 14 (64%) invasive cancer lesions, and in 3 out of 10 (30%) dysplasias, thus indicating that ST3 expression correlates to tumor progression. The ST3 positive
laryngeal cancer
lesions displayed a higher degree of DNA aberration than the ST3 negative lesions thus suggesting that ST3 positivity could indicate highly malignant tumors. Of the three ST3 positive dysplasias, the first progressed rapidly to cancer in situ with suspected microinvasion. The second ST3 positive dysplasia progressed to invasive cancer within five months. The third ST3 positive dysplasia had been radically excised and hereby cured. All but one of the dysplastic lesions showed
p53
immunoreactivity, and all dysplasias exhibited aneuploid cells. ST3 expression appears to be a late event in the multistage process of carcinogenesis and could prove useful as an indicator of dysplasias with imminent risk for progression to invasive cancer.
...
PMID:Stromelysin-3 mRNA expression in dysplasias and invasive epithelial cancer of the larynx. 949 47
Tumours of head and neck belong to the most frequent types of cancer world-wide. In Poland, mortality from
larynx cancer
among males has been continuously increasing during the last decades up to 8.4 deaths per 100,000 men in 1993, which exceeds epidemiological records from other countries. The aetiology of
laryngeal cancer
is strongly associated with exposure to carcinogens present in tobacco smoke. The review describes a sequence of molecular and cellular events from carcinogenic exposure, DNA adduct formation, detection of mutations in the
p53
gene, loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in chromosomal loci encoding the
p53
and p16 genes, and loss of control of the cell cycle. The section concerning DNA adducts includes a discussion of the role of such confounders as exogenous exposure, the age and sex of the subject, and disease progression. The significance of genetic factors as individual risk determinants is discussed in relation to bleomycin-induced chromosome instability and in connection with the occurrence of defects in genes encoding detoxifying enzymes. The question concerning the substantial difference between men and women in
larynx cancer
morbidity and mortality remains open, even when the significantly higher adduct formation in male DNA compared with female material was taken into account. Preliminary experiments suggest a role of the frequently observed loss of the Y-chromosome.
...
PMID:Molecular and cellular alterations in tobacco smoke-associated larynx cancer. 1057 35
The aim of the article is a review of own cytogenic studies on
laryngeal cancer
confronted with the literature data. Spontaneous and bleomycin-induced chromosome instability was analysed in peripheral blood lymphocytes in relation to genetic risk of cancer incidence and progression. Comparative genome hybridization (CGH) was applied to demonstrate gains and losses of DNA copy number in tumour and non-tumour laryngeal mucosa. The profiles of imbalances of DNA copy number were shown to differ between metastazing and non-metastazing tumours. Preliminary data indicate a frequent loss of Y chromosome in tumour cells. The loss of heterozygosity at chromosome
p53
locus (17p) has been shown to be more frequent than at chromosome locus coding 16 gene (9p). Altogether, the experiments have proven that a dynamics of chromosome aberrations is highest at the stage of metastasis.
...
PMID:[Chromosome damage in the course of laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma]. 1068 7
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