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

In order to clarify the significance of mutation of the p53 tumor suppressor gene in the genesis and development of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in an aflatoxin B1 low-exposure area, the spectrum, i.e., incidence, type, and site, of p53 gene mutations was examined in 169 tissue samples resected mainly from Japanese patients using single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and direct sequencing. Forty-nine tumors (29%) showed a p53 mutation (39 point mutations and 10 frameshifts). The point mutations comprised 18 transitions, only 4 of which occurred at CpG sites, and 21 transversions. Two evolutionarily conserved domains, IV and V, contained 65% of all mutations and codon 249 was the most frequent mutation site (7/49). The spectrum of p53 mutation did not differ among HCCs in relation to the type of hepatitis virus infection, sex, age, and background liver disease of patients, tumor size, or presence of metastasis, but incidence and site were significantly associated with the degree of differentiation of cancer cells. In poorly differentiated HCC, p53 mutation was frequent (54%) and clustered on domains IV and V, whereas in well or moderately differentiated HCC, the mutation was less frequent (21%) and equally distributed on domains II to V. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis revealed loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 17p in 55 (69%) of 80 informative cases and in 34 (95%) of 36 cases with p53 mutation. Therefore, p53 gene mutation is suggested to occur independently of the type of viral infection or status of preexisting liver disease and to occur preferentially in moderately and poorly differentiated HCCs in association with or after loss of another p53 allele as a late event of HCC progression.
...
PMID:p53 gene mutation spectrum in hepatocellular carcinoma. 133 Feb 91

alpha-1-Antitrypsin (AAT) is the major antiprotease in human plasma; it is synthesized primarily in hepatocytes and to a lesser extent in several nonhepatic tissues. Under the control of regulatory elements of the human AAT gene, expression of SV40-large tumor antigen (T-ag) in transgenic mice occurred in the liver, stomach, pancreas, and kidney. Among seven founder transgenic animals, six developed liver carcinoma, four showed gastric neoplasia, and one developed pancreatic carcinoma. In three animals the kidneys showed glomerular or tubular epithelial hyperplasia but no malignancy. A stable transgenic line, 1812, was established. Members of this line reproducibly develop liver tumors by 10 weeks of age but do not exhibit any phenotypic changes in other tissues. Histological changes leading to liver tumor formation occurred with predictable kinetics and could be classified into four distinct stages: (a) embryonal/fetal stage, no recognizable histological changes; (b) newborn to 2 weeks of age, hyperplastic hepatocytes with reduced amounts of cytoplasm but no nuclear alterations; (c) between 3 and 8 weeks of age, diffuse liver cell dysplasia without observable tumor nodules; and (d) 8 weeks of age and thereafter, hepatocellular carcinomas in a background of liver dysplasia. Embryonic and newborn liver tissue showed uniform, high level expression of T-ag in the majority of hepatocytes by immunohistochemistry, whereas the dysplastic and tumoral stages were characterized by considerable variation in both the intensity of T-ag staining and the proportion of T-ag-positive cells. Immunoprecipitation analyses showed that T-ag was complexed with cellular protein p53 in all tumor samples. This study showed that SV40 T-ag expression in the liver resulted in cellular hyperplasia and dysplasia; additional event(s) apparently were required for progression to neoplasia. Those cooperating events occurred with predictable kinetics. This transgenic mouse system displays several similarities with human liver disease and provides a practical model for the study of separate steps in hepatocarcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Development of a transgenic mouse system for the analysis of stages in liver carcinogenesis using tissue-specific expression of SV40 large T-antigen controlled by regulatory elements of the human alpha-1-antitrypsin gene. 255 99

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is among the 10 most common tumors in the world. However, incidence is not evenly distributed across the world. In many instances, the proximate cause for the tumor can be identified. Chronic hepatitis B infection is probably the most common cause, followed by chronic hepatitis C. Other important causes are alcoholic liver disease, hemochromatosis, alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, and other chronic liver diseases. Although proximate causes may be identifiable, pathogenesis remains uncertain. Factors that may be important include the presence of Aflatoxin B1 in food, genetic changes induced by the hepatitis B virus, and repeated rounds of necrosis and regeneration, also induced by hepatitis viruses. The genes involved and the mutations necessary for hepatic carcinogenesis are unknown, with the sole exception of the p53 gene, which is probably a late phenomenon. Screening for HCC is widely practiced despite the lack of evidence of improved survival. The screening tests used include alphafetoprotein levels and ultrasonography. Screening can identify small tumors; however, survival may not be improved, because the presence of cirrhosis may limit the number of patients who can undergo resections; recurrences or second primary tumors are common; and the presence of chronic liver disease means that survival may be limited anyway. There are many different forms of therapy available; unfortunately, most have not been compared in randomized controlled trials. Surgery remains the therapy of choice if feasible. All other therapy is palliative, including chemotherapy, chemoembolization, hepatic artery embolization, various forms of radiotherapy, and various forms of ablative therapy.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma. 753 16

Overexpression of the p53 tumour suppressor gene is one of the most common abnormalities in primary human cancers and appears to be a result of point mutation within a highly conserved region of the gene with subsequent encoding for a mutant, more stable protein. In the study, 71 surgically resected hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC) were examined to study the expression of the p53 gene, its relation with clinicopathological parameters and its prognostic significance. Using immunohistochemical detection for mutant p53 protein with monoclonal antibody PAb1801, p53 overexpression was found in 22 tumours (31%) but in none of the non-tumorous liver specimens. Overexpression of p53 was more frequent in tumours with poor cellular differentiation (P = 0.01), in tumours > 5 cm in diameter (P = 0.05), and in those with giant cells present (P = 0.03) and, less significantly, of massive type of Eggel's classification (P = 0.06). It did not have any significant correlation with hepatitis B or C status, background liver disease or serum alpha-fetoprotein levels, nor was it related to tumour invasiveness (venous permeation, direct liver invasion and tumour microsatellite formation). In addition, the presence of p53 mutant protein did not influence tumour recurrence or patients' survival rates. The data suggested that p53 mutation in HCC was associated with a later stage of oncogenesis. However, it was not apparently related to tumour invasiveness/aggressiveness and prognosis.
...
PMID:Overexpression of p53 in hepatocellular carcinomas: a clinicopathological and prognostic correlation. 754 99

The prolonged half-life of mutant p53 makes feasible its immunocytochemical detection. In order to assess the pathogenetic role of mutant p53 in regenerative and neoplastic liver disease we studied its immunohistochemical expression in cases of hepatic cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), cirrhosis with areas of HCC, hepatocellular adenoma and focal nodular hyperplasia. The study included needle and wedge biopsies of 50 cirrhotic livers, 59 HCCs (36 of them with associated cirrhosis), six adenomas and two focal nodular hyperplasias. Sixty-five HCC fine-needle cytology specimens were also included in the study. There was no immunohistochemical evidence of mutant p53 expression in any of the cases of cirrhotic liver (except for one instance associated with HCC) adenoma or focal nodular hyperplasia. In contrast p53 was detected in 8.5% of HCC cases in the biopsy series and 24% of HCC cases in the fine needle aspiration series. In addition, mutant p53 expression in HCC was positively correlated with tumour grade. According to grade, the distribution of p53 positive immunoreactivity among HCCs was as follows: Grade I-II, 0% of cases in the biopsy series and 9% in the fine needle aspirates; Grade III, 18% in the biopsy series and 55% in the fine needle aspirates; and Grade IV, 40% in the biopsy series. Therefore, mutant p53 expression does not seem to be associated with benign liver lesions but seems to correlate with the progression of HCC through various grades of increasing malignancy.
...
PMID:p53 immunoreactivity in hepatocellular adenoma, focal nodular hyperplasia, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. 771 85

Chronic hepadnavirus infection is associated with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in natural hosts such as humans, woodchucks, and Beechey ground squirrels. Several possible oncogenic mechanisms have been identified, including a potential role of the hepadnavirus x (hbx) gene, which transactivates transcription regulated by certain cis-acting sequences, e.g. regulatory sequences of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) and heterologous regulatory sequences of other viruses and cellular genes. The oncogenic potential of hbx is suggested by the observation of HCCs in hbx transgenic mice, the oncogenic transformation of cells expressing hbx in culture, and the transactivation of oncogenes c-myc and c-jun by hbx. Cis-activation of cellular oncogenes N-myc and c-myc by viral promoter insertion has been a common finding in woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV)-associated HCCs of woodchucks. No such cis-activation of any cellular gene has been shown in virus-associated HCCs of ground squirrels or humans. Amplification and overexpression of the c-myc gene has been a common finding in HCCs of ground squirrels, and is rare in woodchuck or human HCCs. Point mutations in the p53 gene and allelic deletion of p53 have been common findings in human HCCs, but have not been found in HCCs in woodchucks and have been found rarely in ground squirrels. How each of these genetic changes in the different hosts contributes to HCC remains to be determined, but apparently different changes in different HCCs of hepadnavirus-infected hosts suggest that several separate genetic events may contribute to the development of HCC. These events may differ in each host, and some may not result from a direct virus-specific mechanism. Chronic hepadnavirus infection is often associated with chronic necroinflammatory liver disease and cirrhosis, a pathologic process common to several other risk factors for HCC. This suggests that this pathologic process (necroinflammatory disease) may be hepatocarcinogenic regardless of the inciting agent. Thus hepadnavirus infection may play an important role in the development of HCC by causing chronic hepatitis and HCC with the same mechanisms by which other risk factors for HCC cause chronic necroinflammatory liver disease and HCC.
...
PMID:Molecular events in the pathogenesis of hepadnavirus-associated hepatocellular carcinoma. 819 85

The molecular role of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in liver disease has yet to be clarified. In this study, we analyzed the relationship of HCV replication with mRNA expression of growth factors and mutation of tumor suppressor gene, ie, transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1), which promotes cirrhotic changes; TGF-alpha, insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II), which are both related to hepatocyte transformation; and tumor suppressor gene p53, which is associated with HCC progression. A semiquantitative RNA polymerase chain reaction (RNA-PCR) was used to analyze genetic expression in 31 cirrhotic liver specimens from patients with HCV. In order to detect HCV replication, the minus-strand RNA of HCV, which serves as a template for the synthesis of genomic plus-strand RNA, was examined. The expression of the growth factors was semiquantified by RNA-PCR, and the mutation of p53 was detected using PCR-single-strand conformation polymorphism. According to the semiquantitative analysis, HCV replication was not associated with the expression of TGF-beta 1 but was significantly so with the overexpression of TGF-alpha (r = 0.74) and IGF-II (r = 0.65) in the HCV-positive cirrhotic livers. No mutation of p53 was recognized in any of the samples. Our investigation thus suggested that the replication of HCV might mediate the coexpression of TGF-alpha and IGF-II and act as a possible initiating factor for hepatocarcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus replication is associated with expression of transforming growth factor-alpha and insulin-like growth factor-II in cirrhotic livers. 856 58

The role of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) X protein in liver tumorigenesis is unresolved. Transgenic mice harboring the X gene (nt 1376-1840 under the control of the human alpha-1-antitrypsin regulatory elements) (ATX mice) display only minor histopathologic alterations of the liver. To determine if ATX mice are more susceptible to the effects of hepatocarcinogens, 12- to 15-d-old male ATX and control littermate mice were injected with a single dose (2 microgram/g body weight) of diethylnitrosamine (DEN). The animals were killed 6-10 mo after exposure and were analyzed for histological changes in the liver. One hundred percent of the DEN-treated AXT mice developed abnormal liver lesions. Then their liver tissues were compared by stereological analysis with those of non-transgenic animals, the ATX mice had a relative twofold increase in the total number of focal lesion and a twofold increase in the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma. Elevated levels of X protein and p53 protein were not detected in carcinogen-induced nodules or tumors. These results are consistent with a model in which the expression of the HBV X protein potentiates the induction of DEN-mediated liver disease.
...
PMID:Increased sensitivity to the hepatocarcinogen diethylnitrosamine in transgenic mice carrying the hepatitis B virus X gene. 863 84

Liver diseases associated with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, including hepatocellular carcinoma, account for more than 1 million deaths annually worldwide. In addition to HBV infection, other risk factors are involved in the etiology of hepatocellular carcinoma and, among these, dietary exposure to the carcinogenic aflatoxins is of particular importance in certain regions of southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. The relative contributions of these two risk factors and the mechanism of the interaction between them in the pathogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma are still poorly understood. The recently developed individual biochemical and molecular markers of aflatoxin exposure, i.e., aflatoxin-albumin adducts in blood and a specific GC to TA transversion mutation in codon 249 of the p53 gene (249ser p53 mutation) in hepatocellular carcinomas, permit a better quantitative estimation of aflatoxin exposure in different populations of the world. A comprehensive summary of the data from our laboratory and the literature, based on a large number (>1000) of individual cases of hepatocellular carcinoma, is presented here and shows the following: 1) A high level and high prevalence of exposure to aflatoxins occur in West Africa, Mozambique, and some regions of China; 2) a high prevalence of the 249ser p53 mutation is detected in these countries; and 3) hepatocellular carcinomas from countries with low or no exposure to aflatoxins show a very low prevalence of the 249ser p53 mutation and distinctly different p53 mutation spectra, probably indicating different etiologies. Experimental and epidemiologic studies demonstrate an interaction between HBV infection and aflatoxins in hepatocarcinogenesis. The relevance of the biochemical/molecular markers of aflatoxin exposure, HBV vaccination, and the reduction of aflatoxin exposure, in addition to the interaction between HBV infection and other risk factors in liver carcinogenesis, are discussed with regard to the implementation of measures for primary prevention.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma: from gene to public health. 941 72

In the development of a cancer, unlimited cell proliferation has been believed to play an important role. In addition, a programmed cell death called apoptosis, which is regulated by several oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, has been suggested to be another important different pathway of carcinogenesis. Recently, several reports on cell proliferation capacity and apoptosis in the development of human liver disease have been published, but the cell proliferation index and its relationship between the expression of the bcl-2 and p53 genes involving apoptosis has not yet been discussed in view of the clinical differences of primary and metastatic liver cancer. In this study, we investigated the cell proliferation index and expression of p53 and bcl-2 in the tumorous and non-tumorous portions of both hepatocellular carcinoma and metastatic liver cancer. The expression of p53 was observed in both hepatocellular carcinoma and metastatic liver cancer, but bcl-2 expression was observed neither in hepatocellular carcinoma nor in metastatic liver cancer. In hepatocellular carcinoma, the p53 positive group showed a higher Ki-67 score (cell proliferation index) and more tumor numbers than the p53 negative group (p < 0.05). In metastatic liver cancer, the results were the same as in hepatocellular carcinoma (p < 0.05). However, we could not correlate the p53 expression and its prognostic significance in hepatocellular carcinoma.
...
PMID:Cell proliferation index and the expression of p53 and Bcl-2 in tumorous and non-tumorous lesions of hepatocellular carcinoma and metastatic liver cancer. 982 91


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>