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)

Small-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (SCNC) is a well characterized malignancy with distinctive cellular morphology and aggressive biologic behavior most frequently encountered in the lung but also noted for origin from other sites. The basis for this difference in incidence and the impact of primary site location on the molecular pathogenesis of the neoplasm is not well understood. To address this issue and to identify reliable molecular markers of potential diagnostic value for primary site localization of this tumor, we have compared the genetic profile of cancer-related gene damage of SCNC arising from a variety of organ sites. The analysis involved microdissected paraffin-embedded formalin fixed specimens of SCNC. Tumors were organized into 3 groups: lung (n = 18), head and neck region (n = 5), and gastrointestinal tract (n = 5). Genotyping evaluated allelic imbalance (loss of heterozygosity) involving genomic regions containing p53 (17p13), L-myc (1p34), OGG1 (3p26), MCC/APC (5q21), p16 (9p21), PTEN (10q23), and point mutational change in K-ras-2 (12p12) using polymerase chain reaction-based microsatellite analysis and DNA sequencing. Distinct genotypic profiles of allelic imbalance using this panel was seen for each group of SCNC enabling primary site determination to be suggested based on genotypic profiling of microdissected tissue samples. Despite similarity in histologic appearance, our study suggests that SCNC have a unique pattern of acquired allelic damage that is determined in part by primary site of tumor development. These attributes can be effectively used for primary localization of metastatic SCNC, thereby assisting in the diagnosis and classification of this neoplasm.
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PMID:Small-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma displays unique profiles of tumor-suppressor gene loss in relationship to the primary site of formation. 1237 19

Stage I non-small cell carcinoma (NSCLC) of the lung is typically treated with surgery alone, but with a 30 to 40% recurrence rate. Prognostic factors to stratify these patients into high- and low-risk groups would be of significant clinical value, but published data are conflicting. We studied 39 Stage I NSCLC treated with resection alone, followed for a minimum of 5 years, and divided into recurrent (RC) and non-recurrent (NRC) groups (n = 12 and 27, respectively). Allelic imbalance (loss of heterozygosity, LOH) involving genomic regions containing L-myc (1p32), hOGG1 (3p26), APC/MCC (5q21), c-fms (5q33.3), p53 (17p13), and DCC (18q21), and point mutational change in K-ras-2 (12p12) were studied by PCR-based microsatellite analysis and DNA sequencing. Mutations in k-ras-2 were seen in 25% and 19% of RC and NRC tumors, respectively, most frequently in adenocarcinomas. LOH in the RC and NRC respectively were 50% and 37% for L-myc, 60% and 33% for hOGG1, 60% and 50% for APC, 38% and 35% for c-fms, 78% and 75% for p53, and 17% and 45% for DCC. No statistical significance was seen comparing any of the allelic alterations with recurrence. LOH for hOGG1 and L-myc were more commonly seen in squamous cell carcinomas. Stage I NSCLC are genetically heterogeneous with respect to mutation acquisition. The approach of investigating a panel of genes for alterations can be applied to any given tumor type, and provides information on patterns of mutations/LOH that can help us better understand the molecular biology of tumorigenesis.
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PMID:Widespread molecular alterations present in stage I non-small cell lung carcinoma fail to predict tumor recurrence. 1252 10

Malignant blue nevus is a rare melanocytic tumor that is described by some authors as a variant of malignant melanoma, whereas others regard it as a distinct entity. To our knowledge no molecular studies of this tumor have been performed, although the molecular pathogenesis of conventional melanomas has been extensively described. We present a case of malignant blue nevus that developed in a 15-cm congenital blue nevus on the back of a 41-year-old man. Subsequent regional lymph node and lung metastases developed within 1 and 29 months, respectively. We performed a molecular analysis for loss of heterozygosity on microdissected samples from the spectrum of benign to malignant blue nevus, using a panel of eight genes (MTS1, MXI1, CMM1, p53, NF1, L-myc hOGG1, and MCC), many of which are commonly associated with conventional melanomas. No loss of heterozygosity was detected, despite informativeness in seven genes. We suggest that malignant blue nevus may represent a distinct entity with a different molecular pathway to tumorigenesis than that of conventional melanomas.
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PMID:Malignant blue nevus: a case report and molecular analysis. 1254 95

Metaplastic breast carcinomas are rare neoplasms showing both carcinomatous and sarcomatous elements. In this report we describe eleven cases of metaplastic breast carcinoma focusing on pathological features and the clinical behaviour of six patients with breast carcinoma with chondroid metaplasia (MCC). We collected eleven cases from 1996 to 2001: immunohistochemical tests were performed in order to obtain data on estrogen and progesterone receptors and the production of p53 gene and HER/2 neu. Neoangiogenesis was studied counting vessels immunohistochemically-stained with CD31 antibody. Six cases showed chondroid metaplasia, three cases were spindle cell carcinoma and two were metaplastic squamous carcinoma. The majority of patients (64%) had pT2 tumors without axillary node metastases: only two cases with spindle or squamous metaplasia showed nodal involvement. Fifty percent of MCC were pT1b-c tumors: no axillary metastases were observed. Vascular invasion was observed in all squamous and spindle cell types and in 66% of MCC: estrogen and progesterone receptors were absent in 90% of the tumors. Immunohistochemical staining for HER2/neu was detected in 72% of spindle cell and squamous carcinomas and in 33% of MCC. Three cases staining highly for p53 were chondroid carcinomas: the staining was uniform both in carcinomatous and in sarcomatous tissue. The majority of metaplastic carcinomas had high angionesis. One patient with a chondroid metaplastic carcinoma was found to be a carrier of a BRCA1 mutation similar to the one responsible for sickle cell disease, possibly altering the spatial structure of the gene product. Only six patients had follow-up periods longer than 36 months: five women were alive and disease-free: one patient with pT2N1 squamous metaplastic carcinoma died of disease 14 months after diagnosis. The six women with MCC were alive and disease-free. Surgical and adjuvant treatment should follow the guidelines for the other most common breast cancers even if the need for chemotherapy is unknown due to the absence of large series randomized or observational data.
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PMID:Metaplastic breast carcinoma: pathology and clinical outcome. 1268 Jan 65

Colorectal carcinomas are characterized by multiple genetic aberrations that occur during tumorigenesis. Several tumor suppressor genes associated with colorectal carcinoma have been identified: MCC, APC, p53, nm23-H1, DCC, DPC4. We examined 73 cases of sporadic human colon cancer and corresponding normal tissue samples to evaluate the loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the APC gene loci. The purpose of this study was also to evaluate whether the LOH at the APC gene is associated with clinicopathological characteristics in sporadic colon cancer. We also investigated presence and the frequency of the most common APC gene mutations and APC E1317Q and I1307K germ-line variants in Croatian colorectal cancer patients. Five markers in all patients were found to be heterozygous and informative for LOH analysis. LOH at the APC locus was detected in 30.1% of tumors were examined. The majority of APC gene LOH was observed in Dukes' B (55.6%) and in the moderately differentiated tumors (42.9%). Only 1309 APC gene mutation was detected in our samples. In one tumor sample, a new sporadic mutation of the APC gene in codon 1374 was detected. APC E1317Q and I1307K germ-line variants were not detected in our population. But APC E1317Q sporadic mutation was found in one tumor sample.
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PMID:APC gene loss of heterozygosity, mutations, E1317Q, and I1307K germ-line variants in sporadic colon cancer in Croatia. 1550 35

Pancreatic mucinous cystic tumors (MCT) are proliferations of mucin-producing epithelia supported by an ovarian-like stroma. They are classified into adenomas (MCA), borderline (MCB) and noninvasive or invasive carcinomas (MCC). The molecular mechanisms underlying their clinical behavior are poorly understood, partly due to the lack of cellular models. We report the establishment of MCC1, the first cell line from a pancreatic MCT, deriving from the highly dysplastic cell component of a noninvasive MCC. MCC1 has mutations in codon 12 of K-RAS (GGT>GAT), codon 58 of P16 (CGA>TGA) and codon 132 of P53 (AAG>AGG). The FHIT and DPC4 genes are unaltered. Immunohistochemistry shows abnormal expression of MUC1 and p53, loss of p16 and retention of Fhit and Dpc4 in both the cell line and the highly dysplastic cells of the primary lesion. The morphological and molecular features of MCC1 and its corresponding primary tumor are consistent with a model for non-invasive MCC, where K-RAS, P16, P53 and MUC1 alterations are pre-invasive changes associated with progression of malignancy of MCT from adenoma to carcinoma. MCC1 is sensitive to 5-fluorouracil, representing the first assessment of drug sensitivity for MCC. Finally, MCC1 is a suitable model for preclinical studies, as it grows in immunodeficient mice.
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PMID:Mucinous cystic carcinoma of the pancreas: a unique cell line and xenograft model of a preinvasive lesion. 1568 69

Tumour formations arise as a consequence of alterations in the control of cell proliferation as well as with disorders in interactions between cells and their environment that result in invasion and metastasis. Recent advances in understanding the genetic basis of malignant diseases have been dominated by research in colorectal cancer. Genetic alterations of several proto-oncogenes and tumor-suppressor genes (e.g. APC/MCC, RAS, DCC, p53 mutations and/or allelic losses, hyperexpression of c-MYC and RB genes), as well as other genomic alterations, appear at characteristic stages of tumor development and are observed in most neoplasms. Generally, the normal cell has multiple independent mechanisms that regulate its growth and differentiation potential, and several separate events would, therefore, be needed to override these control mechanisms, as well as induce the other aspects of the transformed phenotype, like metastasis. These signals may be either positive or negative, and the acquisition of tumorigenicity results from genetic changes that affect these control points following a multistep mode. Statistics of the frequency of cancer incidence with age in humans indicate that for the genesis of e.g. lung carcinoma, five or six steps are required. Other types of cancers, such as leukemias and sarcomas, probably require quite a different number of rate-limiting changes. One of the best characterized tumours to provide a genetic model is colorectal tumorigenesis. Mutations implicated in breast cancer tumorigenicity are also studied and used as a genetic model in the literature worldwide. Finally, activation of c-abl in chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia could also be presented as an example, which provides probably the strongest evidence for the role of proto-oncogenes in human malignancy process.
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PMID:Genetic models of human cancer as a multistep process. Paradigm models of colorectal cancer, breast cancer, and chronic myelogenous and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 1647 12

Pathologic staging in colorectal adenocarcinoma (CA) is based on the concept that the timing of metastatic tumor spread is directly related to the depth of the primary tumor invasion. To evaluate the temporal sequence of CA metastasis, we performed microdissection mutational profiling at multiple microscopic sites of primary and metastatic CA specimens. Twenty-one cases of CA were selected from fixed-tissue archives. Primary tumors were microdissected at the deepest point of invasion. Comparative mutational profiling for different genomic loci [1p36(CCM = cutaneous malignant melanoma], 3p26(OGGI = 8 oxoguanine DNA glycosylase), 5q23 (APC, MCC = mutated in colorectal cancer), 9p21(p16/CDKN2A = cyclin-dependent kinase 2A), 10q23(PTEN = phosphatase and tensin homolog [mutated in multiple advanced cancers 11), 12p12(K-ras-2 point mutation), 17p13(TP53), 18q25(DCC= deleted in colorectal cancer) was carried out on each microdissected tissue target using microsatellite loss of heterozygosity determination or DNA sequencing. All primary and metastatic sites of CA manifested acquired mutational change in 18 to 91 per cent of the genomic markers. In 15/21 (71%) cases, metastatic sites lacked a specific allelic loss seen in the corresponding primary tumor, indicating that the metastasis occurred before maximal depth of primary invasion. This was further supported by discordant mutational profiles between primary and secondary tumors, requiring divergent clonal evolution. This is the first report describing the temporal sequence and significance of sequential mutational acquisition in clinical tissue specimens with potential implications for a new molecular pathology approach to classify human cancer.
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PMID:Microdissection-based allelotyping: a novel technique to determine the temporal sequence and biological aggressiveness of colorectal cancer. 1671 2

Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is an aggressive dermal tumour of neuroendocrine origin with poor prognosis. The role of cell cycle-regulatory proteins (p53/p21/p27) in MCC pathogenesis and their prognostic importance were evaluated. Twenty-four primary MCC specimens with corresponding clinical data were analysed by immunohistochemistry for p21, p27 and p53 antibodies. The stainings were evaluated semi-quantitatively and the results analysed statistically. p53 was negative in 80% and p21 in 71% of the samples. Positive staining for p27 was evident in 92% of the samples. However, the expression of these antibodies did not correlate with the outcome of the patient. The proportion of p53- and p21-negative samples seems to indicate that correction processes after DNA damage are not activated during MCC pathogenesis, a supposition that is supported by the aggressive nature of this tumour. Therefore, the expressions of the three studied cell cycle regulators cannot serve as prognostic markers for survival.
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PMID:Cell cycle control by p21, p27 and p53 in Merkel cell carcinoma. 1682 88

Primary neuroendocrine carcinoma of the skin, or Merkel cell carcinoma, is the most aggressive cutaneous neoplasm. In spite of its similarities to small cell carcinomas from other locations, Merkel cell carcinoma shows many peculiarities probably related to its epidermal origin and the etiologic role of UV radiation. We have immunohistochemically investigated 43 markers on a tissue microarray in which 31 surgically resected Merkel cell carcinomas were represented. Of these, 15 patients remained free of disease after removal, whereas 16 developed metastases. Immunoreactivity was scored according to staining intensity and the percentage of positive cells. We found statistically significant correlations between metastatic tumor spread and overexpression of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) 7, MMP10/2, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 3, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), P38, stromal NF-kappaB, and synaptophysin. Also detected were statistically significant correlations between the expression levels of MMP7 and VEGF, MMP7 and P21, MMP7 and P38, MMP10/2 and VEGF, P38 and synaptophysin, P38 and P53, and P21 and stromal NF-kappaB. These findings may be helpful in predicting the clinical course of Merkel cell carcinoma and are potentially useful for the development of targeted therapies.
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PMID:Expression profiles associated with aggressive behavior in Merkel cell carcinoma. 1711 23


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