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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A mutation in the
tumor suppressor p53
gene resulting in an Arg-->Ser substitution in position 249 is found frequently in human hepatocellular carcinomas associated with hepatitis B infection and with aflatoxin exposure. To determine the significance of this mutation in an in vivo experimental model using transgenic mice, we introduced a two-nucleotide change in the mouse
p53
gene at amino-acid position 246, which is equivalent to position 249 in human
p53
, by the recombinant polymerase chain reaction mismatched primer method. This
p53
mutation resulted in the same change, an Arg-->Ser substitution, as in the human
p53
gene at position 249. We now report that the protein product of this mutant mouse p53ser246 had properties similar to those of the wild-type protein when tested by binding to (i) monoclonal antibodies PAb246 and PAb240, ii) simian virus 40 large T antigen, and (iii) heat-shock protein. However, it had mutant-type transforming properties when tested for colony formation with an osteosarcoma cell line. It was not active, as is wild-type
p53
, in transcription activation of the muscle creatine kinase promoter. These properties are the same as those found in the p53trp248 product of the
p53
mutation associated with the
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
. Although less is known about the human p53ser249 product associated with hepatocellular carcinoma, the mutant murine p53ser246 protein shares the known properties of the human gene product.
...
PMID:Characterization of a murine p53ser246 mutant equivalent to the human p53ser249 associated with hepatocellular carcinoma and aflatoxin exposure. 760 78
Cells heterozygous for mutations in
p53
demonstrate extreme genomic instability and develop mutations detectable at the chromosome level as well as the molecular level. This genomic instability causes initially nontumorigenic ras-expressing immortal
LFS
cells to progress to a tumorigenic state presumably due to additional mutational events. It is not surprising that
LFS
families with these
p53
mutations develop the additional mutations necessary for cancer to occur at such high frequencies. This observation is consistent with increased cancer rates in these families being due to abrogation of a rate limiting step rather than a rate expected for one less step in a multistep carcinogenic process. Although
p53
has been shown to be able to function as a transcription factor, mutations in
p53
appear to affect genomic stability in
LFS
fibroblasts with double minutes and telomeric associations being prominent early events. One possibility is that
p53
controls the expression of genes required for fidelity of replication or telomerase activity. Alternatively
p53
may itself be a replication factor like the transcription factor CTF. In the future, we plan to investigate whether
p53
plays a direct role in replication.
...
PMID:Genomic instability due to germline p53 mutations drives preneoplastic progression toward cancer in human cells. 760 20
Expression of platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) and PDGF-receptor mRNA was examined from a glioblastoma taken from a patient with
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
. Northern blot analysis and in situ hybridisation showed very high concentrations of both PDGF-A and PDGF alpha-receptor mRNA in the tumour. The overall pattern of PDGF expression was similar to those found in sporadic glioblastomas. Mutations in
p53
has been implicated as an early pathogenic event leading to sporadic low grade astrocytomas, and is the third most common tumour type in patients with
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
, where they are predisposed due to a germline mutation in the
p53
tumour suppressor gene. This study suggests that progression towards a glioblastoma in both the general population and in patients with
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
may involve potential autocrine and paracrine stimulation by growth factors such as PDGF.
...
PMID:Expression of platelet derived growth factor and platelet derived growth factor receptor mRNA in a glioblastoma from a patient with Li-Fraumeni syndrome. 760 73
We demonstrated a germline
p53
replication error in two generations of a Li-Fraumeni family affected with liposarcoma, adrenocortical carcinoma, and osteosarcoma. The trinucleotide repeat mutation changed 5'-AGT GTG GTG GTG-3' at codons 215-218 to 5'-AGT TGG TTG GTG GTG-3'. The predicted protein would be elongated by one amino acid (val216-->trp leu) without a change in charge. Detection of
p53
in the adrenal tumor by immunostaining suggested that the mutant protein was expressed. Persistence of the mutation in the germline may suggest a defect in DNA repair in the family member first affected. This is the first report where germline transmission of replication-damaged
p53
trinucleotide repeats is associated with the
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
.
...
PMID:Complex replication error causes p53 mutation in a Li-Fraumeni family. 761 54
Normal cells have a strictly limited growth potential and senesce after a defined number of population doublings (PDs). In contrast, tumor cells often exhibit an apparently unlimited proliferative potential and are termed immortalized. Although spontaneous immortalization of normal human cells in vitro is an extremely rare event, we observed this in fibroblasts from an affected member of a
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
kindred. The fibroblasts were heterozygous for a
p53
mutation and underwent senescence as expected at PD 40. In four separate senescent cultures (A to D), there were cells that eventually recommenced proliferation. This was associated with aneuploidy in all four cultures and either loss (cultures A, C, and D) or mutation (culture B) of the wild-type (wt)
p53
allele. Loss of wt
p53
function was insufficient for immortalization, since cultures A, B, and D subsequently entered crisis from which they did not escape. Culture C has continued proliferating beyond 400 PDs and thus appears to be immortalized. In contrast to the other cultures, the immortalized cells have no detectable p16INK4 protein. A culture that had a limited extension of proliferative potential exhibited a progressive decrease in telomere length with increasing PD. In the culture that subsequently became immortalized, the same trend occurred until PD 73, after which there was a significant increase in the amount of telomeric DNA, despite the absence of telomerase activity. Immortalization of these cells thus appears to be associated with loss of wt
p53
and p16INK4 expression and a novel mechanism for the elongation of telomeres.
...
PMID:Alterations in p53 and p16INK4 expression and telomere length during spontaneous immortalization of Li-Fraumeni syndrome fibroblasts. 765 92
p53
has pleiotropic functions including control of genomic plasticity and integrity. Here we report that
p53
can bind to several transcription factor IIH-associated factors, including transcription-repair factors, XPD (Rad3) and XPB, as well as CSB involved in strand-specific DNA repair, via its C-terminal domain. We also found that wild-type, but not Arg273His mutant p53 inhibits XPD (Rad3) and XPB DNA helicase activities. Moreover, repair of UV-induced dimers is slower in
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
cells (heterozygote
p53
mutant) than in normal human cells. Our findings indicate that
p53
may play a direct role in modulating nucleotide excision repair pathways.
...
PMID:p53 modulation of TFIIH-associated nucleotide excision repair activity. 766 14
The
p53
gene, located on chromosome 17p 13.1 and coding for a nuclear 393 amino-acids phosphoprotein acts to constrain or antagonize cell growth, and as such, is a tumor suppressor gene. In fact, inactivation of
p53 tumor suppressor
gene is a common event in the development of all or most types of human cancers. About half of cell cancer cases analysed thus far involve missense mutation of one
p53
allele combined with the deletion of the second allele, and many of the remaining cases involve a functional inactivation of
p53 protein
through non mutational mechanisms. The importance of
p53
as an inherited cancer susceptibility gene has been demonstrated in
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
. In some circumstances, it has been shown that in response to DNA damage, the
p53
level in the cell increases considerably and induces a cell growth arrest late in G1 phase. This cycle arrest allows the altered DNA to be repaired before entry of the cell into S phase. This function of
p53
helps to insure the genomic stability of the cell. Mutations in
p53
eliminate this response and result in enhanced frequency of genomic rearrangements. In other circumstances wild type
p53
may act by triggering cell death by apoptosis. The
p53 protein
exerts its physiological functions through various biochemical activities. These include its ability to be a site-specific transcriptional transactivator as well as a repressor of transcription. The oncoproteins derived from several oncogenic DNA viruses including SV40 large T antigen, the adenovirus E1B protein, and papillomavirus E6 protein, as well as specific cellular gene products e.g. mdm2 form complexes with the
p53 protein
, causing its inactivation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[P53 and cancers]. 767 43
The early events in the G2 checkpoint response to ionizing radiation (IR) were analyzed in diploid normal human fibroblasts (NHFs) and fibroblasts from patients with two heritable cancer syndromes. Exposure to gamma-radiation of asynchronously growing NHFs resulted in a rapid reduction in the number of cells in mitosis (G2 delay) and was accompanied by a quantitatively similar reduction in the p34CDC2/cyclin B in vitro histone H1 kinase activity as compared with sham-treated controls. This G2 delay was strong by 1 h following exposure to IR, maximal by 2 h, and was accompanied by an accumulation of tyrosine-phosphorylated p34CDC2 molecules. In contrast, fibroblasts from individuals with ataxia telangiectasia displayed significantly less reduction of the mitotic index or histone H1 kinase activity after IR. Low passage fibroblasts from individuals with
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
having one wild-type and one mutated
p53
allele were similar to NHFs in their immediate G2 checkpoint response to IR, as were NHFs expressing the human papilloma virus type 16 E6 gene product (functionally inactivating
p53
) and low passage cells from
p53
-deficient mouse embryos. However, the
p53
-deficient fibroblasts were genomically unstable and became defective in their early G2 checkpoint response to IR. Furthermore, immortal
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
fibroblasts lacking wild-type
p53
displayed an attenuated G2 checkpoint response. These results link the early events in G2 checkpoint response to IR in NHFs with a rapid inhibition of p34CDC2/cyclin B protein kinase activity and demonstrate that while not required for this immediate G2 delay, lack of
p53
can lead to subsequent genetic alterations that result in defective G2 checkpoint function.
...
PMID:Defective G2 checkpoint function in cells from individuals with familial cancer syndromes. 771 86
We present ARCAD, a method to estimate the disease risk associated with mutation carrier status using data on families ascertained by affected individuals, in which a germline mutation has been detected. Because the event of interest, the age of onset, is a censored variable, the method uses the survival analysis approach to formulate the likelihood. Provided that selection criteria are clearly defined, the ascertainment bias is removed by including a correction term in the likelihood computation. We simulated family data and selected those with a proband affected before age 17, and at least one or at least two relatives affected before age 46. We show that including the correction for the ascertainment provides reliable estimates of the risk, even when many individuals are not tested for the mutation. An application to cancer risk and germline
p53
mutations is presented. We routinely investigate the
p53
status for all the children treated in the Department of Pediatric Oncology at the Institute Gustave Roussy, whose family displays at least one relative affected by cancer before age 46. We identified 5 families with an inherited germline
p53
mutation. The risk for any cancer for a mutation carrier estimated by ARCAD was 42% within the age class 0-16 years, 38% within the age class 17-45 years, and 63% after 45 years, with a lifetime risk of 85%. These risks are almost entirely explained by the occurrence of the six most frequent cancers encountered in the
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
.
...
PMID:ARCAD: a method for estimating age-dependent disease risk associated with mutation carrier status from family data. 771 97
Inappropriate expression of Met, the receptor for hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor, has been implicated in sarcomagenesis via an autocrine mechanism. Sarcomas occur at high frequency in individuals with
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
as well as in
p53
-deficient mice. Here we show that these tumors express high levels of Met. Moreover, late passage fibroblast cell lines established from
p53
-deficient animals overexpress Met and can be tumorigenic in athymic nude mice, suggesting that progression occurs in vitro. The tumor explants display increased hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor expression and Met turnover, indicating that autocrine Met activation contributes to tumor progression. Thus, the loss of wild-type
p53
appears to greatly enhance the opportunity for inappropriate Met expression. Loss of
p53
function does not by itself cause transformation, but inappropriate Met expression may be an important factor in sarcomagenesis.
...
PMID:Met proto-oncogene product is overexpressed in tumors of p53-deficient mice and tumors of Li-Fraumeni patients. 772 66
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