Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Replication of DNA occurs at discrete sites in eukaryotic cell nuclei, where replication proteins are clustered into large complexes, or 'replicases'. Similarly, viral DNA replication is a highly structured process, notably in herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1; reviewed in ref. 4) in which large globular 'replication compartments' containing the viral replication machinery exist. Replicating cellular DNA redistributes to these compartments upon HSV-1 infection. We have now used antibodies raised against several cellular proteins to detect changes in their subnuclear localization on HSV-1 infection. We found that various proteins involved in cellular DNA replication move to sites of viral DNA synthesis, whereas a selection of non-replication proteins do not. The
retinoblastoma
protein and
p53
(the products of two putative anti-oncogenes) relocate to the same sites as known DNA replication proteins, suggesting that they may be associated with DNA replication complexes in normal, uninfected cells.
...
PMID:Localization of p53, retinoblastoma and host replication proteins at sites of viral replication in herpes-infected cells. 167 28
Loss of tumor suppressor genes is involved in the mechanism of tumorigenesis of many solid tumors. We tested 9 hepatitis B virus (HBV)-positive and 10 HBV-negative hepatocellular carcinomas for loss of somatic heterozygosity using 14 polymorphic probes mapping to chromosomes 4, 11, 13, and 17. Losses were found on all chromosome arms tested. The highest frequency of loss was observed at the D13S1 locus (67%) at band 13q12. Losses were also observed at three other loci on 13q. Twenty-one % of informative cases showed loss on 17p using the probe pYNZ22 which maps near the
p53
locus. Losses on 4q were infrequent with 17% found at one locus and no loss at two others. The
retinoblastoma
gene and the locus on 17p were only inactivated in our HBV-negative tumors, although the numbers were too small for statistical significance. For all loci tested, we found no significant differences in the frequency of losses with HBV status, ethnic background, cirrhosis, grade of tumor, or presence of hemochromatosis.
...
PMID:Loss of somatic heterozygosity in hepatocellular carcinoma. 167 14
We detected a germ-line mutation of the
p53
gene in a patient with a malignant ependymoma of the posterior fossa. This mutation, which was found at codon 242, resulted in an amino acid substitution in a highly conserved site of exon 7 of the
p53
gene; the same mutation was found in both the germ-line and the tumor tissue. This is the most common region of previously described somatic
p53
mutations in tumor specimens and of the germ-line
p53
mutations in patients with the Li-Fraumeni cancer syndrome. Evaluation of the patient's family revealed several direct maternal and paternal relatives who had died at a young age from different types of cancer. The association of a germ-line
p53
mutation with an intracranial malignancy and a strong family history of cancer suggests that
p53
gene mutations predispose a person to malignancy and, like
retinoblastoma
mutations, may be inherited.
...
PMID:Identification of a germ-line mutation in the p53 gene in a patient with an intracranial ependymoma. 167 37
Osteosarcoma tumorigenesis is consistent with a model by which tumorigenesis results if both alleles at the
retinoblastoma
susceptibility locus (RBI) are altered. Additional genetic evidence strongly suggests that another obligate event in osteosarcoma tumorigenesis is the homozygous alteration of another gene,
p53
. Both the RB1 gene and
p53
have been proposed to act as tumor-suppressor genes, suggesting that, in this instance, tumorigenesis is the result of the loss of gene function of these two genes, rather than a gain of function.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic considerations in osteosarcoma. 167 82
Five antibodies directed against the whole or part of
p53 protein
have been used to detect the protein immunohistochemically in 70 infiltrating breast carcinomas and 10 ductal carcinomas in situ. Mutations are known to occur in different conserved domains, and the antibodies employed spanned the expected sites.
p53 protein
was identified in 53 per cent of infiltrating carcinomas using the antibodies PAb 240, PAb 1801, C19, and JG8. The antibody PAb 421 detected the protein in 31.5 per cent; all positive with the other antibodies. Well-differentiated oestrogen receptor-positive tumours had a low incidence of
p53
detection. Variation in the percentage of reactivity was seen between carcinomas and in some cases between different antibodies in the same cancer. Those carcinomas with a high percentage of positive cells with all antibodies were more likely to have metastasized to nodes, be at an advanced stage, and be oestrogen receptor-negative/epidermal growth factor receptor-positive. There was no significant correlation with c-erbB-2 protein expression or
retinoblastoma
protein loss.
p53 protein
was detected in a high proportion of cells in three of the six comedo ductal carcinomas in situ studied but either not at all or at a lower level in tumours of the cribriform type.
p53
mutations are common in breast carcinomas, but heterogeneity within individual tumours is frequent. Marked expression of
p53
appears to relate to tumour progression.
...
PMID:Expression of p53 protein in infiltrating and in-situ breast carcinomas. 168 9
We have used antisense oligonucleotides to study the roles of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) and the two antioncogenes,
retinoblastoma
susceptibility (Rb) and
p53
, in the negative regulation of proliferation of early hematopoietic cells in culture. The antisense TGF-beta sequence significantly enhanced the frequency of colony formation by multi-lineage, early erythroid, and granulomonocytic progenitors, but did not affect colony formation by late progenitors. Single cell culture and limiting dilution analysis indicated that autocrine TGF-beta is produced by a subpopulation of early progenitors. Antisense Rb but not antisense
p53
yielded similar results in releasing multipotential progenitors (colony-forming unit-granulocyte/erythroid/macrophage/megakaryocyte) from quiescence. Rb antisense could partially reverse the inhibitory effect of exogenous TGF-beta. Anti-TGF-beta blocking antibodies, antisense TGF-beta, or Rb oligonucleotides all had similar effects. No additive effects were observed when these reagents were combined, suggesting a common pathway of action. Our results are consistent with the model that autocrine production of TGF-beta negatively regulates the cycling status of early hematopoietic progenitors through interaction with the Rb gene product.
...
PMID:Release of early human hematopoietic progenitors from quiescence by antisense transforming growth factor beta 1 or Rb oligonucleotides. 171 34
We examined structure and expression of the
p53
and Rb genes in a C3HOS transplantable mouse model of osteosarcoma. The results were compared to analogous studies conducted with five human osteosarcoma cell lines. The
p53
gene was found rearranged in the mouse tumour. The rearrangement mapped to the first intron region of the
p53
gene and as a result, no
p53
expression could be detected in C3HOS tumours. Using
p53
genomic probes, we have detected the same rearrangement in the original radiation-induced tumour and the various clones that were isolated from it. Deletion and rearrangement of the
p53
gene were also found in three out of five of the human osteosarcoma cell lines (MG-63, G-292, Saos-2). No
p53
expression could be detected in these three cell lines. In the affected human osteosarcoma cell lines, the rearrangement involved the first intron region. In addition, the mouse tumor was analysed for structural and expression changes in the Rb and the c-myc genes. Normal expression of both genes were detected in the murine tumour. Only one (Saos-2) human osteosarcoma cell line exhibited gross structural alteration in the
retinoblastoma
gene. The results suggest that the inactivation of
p53
may be an important step in the development of osteosarcomas, and that a rearrangement affecting the first intron is common in osteosarcomas.
...
PMID:Inactivation of p53 gene in human and murine osteosarcoma cells. 173 19
Mutation of the
retinoblastoma
(Rb) gene is found frequently in human sarcomas, lung, bladder and breast carcinomas and is the molecular basis for hereditary predisposition to
retinoblastoma
. The Rb protein is a nuclear phosphoprotein that is differentially phosphorylated during the cell cycle. Its precise function is unknown but it has been suggested that it may act as a transcriptional regulator or as a regulator of cellular DNA synthesis. The Rb protein forms specific complexes with the oncogenes of three different groups of DNA tumour viruses. We have prepared a new monoclonal antibody to the Rb protein and used it to establish sensitive immunoassays for Rb complexed to T antigen. In SV40-infected and transformed cells these assays showed that Rb enters a trimolecular complex containing
p53
, Rb and T. A large panel of human tumour cell lines was tested for expression, cellular localization and T-binding activity of Rb using the new antibody.
...
PMID:Cellular localization and T antigen binding of the retinoblastoma protein. 174 Nov 57
The two-stage murine skin tumorigenesis model is widely used to study the development of squamous cell neoplasias. We have investigated expression of the
p53
and
retinoblastoma
tumor suppressor genes in eight murine skin tumor cell lines of varied histopathology and malignant potential, in seven in vivo-derived clones from these cell lines, and in 39 primary short-term cultures of similarly induced skin tumors at various stages of tumor progression. One squamous cell carcinoma cell line and three more malignant clones derived from it revealed mutations of the
p53 protein
by immunoprecipitation analyses despite normal-sized
p53
transcripts. Sequence analysis identified the nature of the point mutations in these lines, a G----C transversion in codon 132. Mouse
retinoblastoma
transcripts and protein were unaltered in all the cell lines examined. Among short-term cultures of skin tumors, the
p53
gene appeared normal in all papillomas and early well-differentiated carcinomas by Southern and immunoprecipitation analyses. In contrast, four of eight tumors from later stages of promotion (50-60 weeks) possessed alterations in
p53
, including loss of the
p53
product, and loss of immunoreactivity with a murine-specific antibody recognizing only wild-type
p53 protein
. Loss of heterozygosity at the
p53
locus was similarly observed in several more malignant tumors from later stages of promotion. In contrast
retinoblastoma
expression was normal regardless of the stage of promotion or histological grade of the tumor. Direct sequence analyses of exons 5 through 8 of the
p53
gene in eight advanced murine skin tumors revealed a 25% incidence of
p53
mutations. These point mutations were located in codons 245 and 263. Collectively, these data indicate that alterations in the
p53
gene occur in 25 to 50% of murine skin tumors induced by the two-stage tumorigenesis protocol and are later events in murine skin tumor progression. Moreover, these alterations are associated with tumors possessing a more malignant and/or poorly differentiated phenotype.
...
PMID:Alterations of the p53 tumor suppressor gene during mouse skin tumor progression. 174 35
Four chromosomal regions were tested for loss of constitutional heterozygosity in primary tumours from 85 Icelandic breast cancer patients. Loss of heterozygosity and other types of gene rearrangements were observed in 37% of informative cases at the
retinoblastoma
locus, RB1, on chromosome 13q. Allele losses on chromosome 17 were tested with two polymorphic probes on 17p and two on 17q. Loss of heterozygosity or other types of genetic rearrangement were detected in 43.5% of cases on 17p near the
p53
gene and 40.5% on 17q. In our study abnormalities at the RB1 locus and on chromosome 17 frequently occurred together, indicating that the coincident inactivation of more than one tumour suppressor gene may, in some cases, play a part in tumour formation. No significant correlation was found between these losses and clinico-histological parameters. Family history of breast cancer was found to be more common among patients with RB1 deletions and this trend was strengthened in cases where there were deletions at both the RB1 locus and on chromosome 17.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity at selective sites on chromosomes 13 and 17 in human breast carcinoma. 174 6
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>