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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To investigate the biological function of p53 in colon carcinoma cells, a wild-type p53 expression plasmid under the control of the human cytomegalovirus promoter was stably transfected into the human colon adenocarcinoma cell line WiDr, which carries a mutation of the p53 gene at codon 273. Exogenous wild-type p53 transcripts were detected at various expression levels in 8 of 117 G418-resistant clones. The growth rates of the wild-type p53+ clones in culture did not change significantly. The efficiency of colony formation in soft agar, however, was completely suppressed in two wild-type p53+ clones. This is the first to demonstrate the feasibility of stable transfection of the wild-type p53 gene under the control of non-inducible promoter in human colon cancer cells. The major alteration found was that wild-type p53+ cells which were incubated with anti-Fas IgM showed marked cytolysis with preferential over-expression of wild-type p53 accompanied by overexpression of a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, WAF1, whereas the endogenous mutant p53 retained its expression level. The findings suggest that a Fas-initiated pathway is incidentally linked to a p53-dependent apoptotic pathway through the reconstituted wild-type p53 gene in WiDr cells. This model should help elucidating the additional role of the p53 tumor suppressor gene and the mechanism of apoptosis in colon carcinoma cells.
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PMID:Induction of Fas-mediated apoptosis in p53-transfected human colon carcinoma cells. 747 11

The WAF1/CIP1 gene, a potential tumor suppressor gene, has recently been cloned and identified as a p53 mediator and an inhibitor for G1 cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). We undertook this study to investigate the possible role of the WAF1/CIP1 gene in human prostatic carcinoma. Matched normal and cancer tissues from 18 patients with prostate cancer were screened for WAF1/CIP1 mutation by nested reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction/single strand conformational polymorphism (RT-PCR/SSCP) and DNA sequencing. Shifted bands from three tumor, but not the matched normal specimens, were observed. Subsequent direct DNA sequencing of the PCR fragments identified four sequence alterations including a cytosine (C) to adenine (A) transversion and a guanine (G) to A transition and two A insertions. Our results demonstrated that mutations of the WAF1/CIP1 gene occur and may be important during the pathogenesis of human prostate cancer. This is the first report of WAF1/CIP1 mutation in a primary human cancer.
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PMID:Somatic mutations of the WAF1/CIP1 gene in primary prostate cancer. 747 62

The tumor-suppressor p53 inhibits cell cycle progression by direct transactivation of the p21WAF1/CIP1/SDI1 gene, which encodes a universal inhibitor of cyclin dependent kinases (cdk). The proto-oncogene product c-Myc induces cell cycle progression and, in the absence of survival factors, apoptosis. However, a direct link between the cell cycle machinery and c-Myc has not yet been established. We show that c-Myc has not yet been established. We show that c-Myc abrogates a p53-induced G1-arrest without elevating the expression of cdks or cyclins involved in the G1/S-transition. Instead, the results suggest that c-Myc interferes with the inhibitory action of p21 on cdk/cyclin-complexes by inducing a heat-labile inhibitor of p21. The inactivation of p21 and related cdk-inhibitors may explain several of the oncogenic actions of c-Myc, including the induction of proliferation, immortalisation and the inhibition of differentiation. Modulation of cdk activity by the induction of an inhibitor of cdk-inhibitors represents a novel mechanism of cell cycle regulation in mammalian cells.
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PMID:Abrogation of p53-induced cell cycle arrest by c-Myc: evidence for an inhibitor of p21WAF1/CIP1/SDI1. 747 65

The inducible response of the tumour suppressor gene p53 has been examined following exposure to DNA-damaging agents in Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) cell lines, an autosomal recessive disorder with multiple clinical and biological abnormalities including sensitivity to ionising radiation. The p53 induction was significantly delayed and reduced in the 8 AT cell lines examined over the 6 h following irradiation with no dose response in p53 induction being observed compared to control cells. The increase of WAF1/CIP1(p21) and GADD45 mRNA, two genes transcriptionally activated by p53, was also reduced in the AT cell lines after such treatment. In contrast, the increase in p53 protein, WAF1/CIP1(p21) and GADD45 mRNA expression following exposure to the alkylating agent methylmethane sulphonate (25 and 100 micrograms ml-1) was similar in both cell types. No alterations in the expression of EBNA-5, an EBV-encoded nuclear antigen which has been shown to bind p53 or mutations in the p53 gene (exons 4 to 8) were found in the AT cell lines studied. The AT gene product would thus appear to be involved upstream of p53, GADD45 and WAF1/CIP1 (p21) in the signalling of the presence of strand breaks produced by ionising radiation, with this defect in response contributing to the high cancer risk and radiosensitivity observed in this disorder.
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PMID:The role of the Ataxia telangiectasia gene in the p53, WAF1/CIP1(p21)- and GADD45-mediated response to DNA damage produced by ionising radiation. 747 67

It has been reported that the p53 gene mediates an ionizing radiation-induced G1 arrest in mammalian cells. To further characterize this important phenomenon, a panel of seven human diploid fibroblast cell strains and 14 human tumor cell lines from a variety of sources with both wild-type and mutant p53 status were assayed for their susceptibility to G1 arrest after gamma-ray irradiation by a continuous labeling [3H]thymidine incorporation technique. An irreversible G1-block involving 20-70% of the cell population was observed in diploid fibroblasts irradiated with 4 Gy. The block was abolished by transfection with the Human Papilloma Virus E6 gene and in an ataxia telangiectasia (AT) cell line, indicating a role for the AT and p53 genes respectively in this process. In contrast to wild-type normal fibroblast cell strains, the G1-block in all tumor cell lines was significantly reduced, irrespective of their p53 status. None of the nine human tumor cell lines with mutant p53 genes showed a significant G1-block following irradiation with 4 Gy. Among the five tumor cell lines expressing wild-type p53, two showed no apparent G1-block. The remaining three showed a G1-block involving only 8-15% of the cell population, a block much smaller in magnitude than that seen in diploid fibroblasts. Finally, a diploid fibroblast cell strain and a tumor cell line, both showing a normal p53 and p21/WAF1 expression pattern, were examined for pRb phosphorylation before and after irradiation. The diploid fibroblast cell strain showed a significant G1-arrest and a clear inhibition of pRb phosphorylation by irradiation whereas the tumor cells showed no G1-arrest and no inhibition of pRb phosphorylation. These results suggest that (1) multiple genetic factors may modulate the occurrence and magnitude of the G1-arrest induced by exposure to ionizing radiation, (2) the capacity for p53 to mediate a radiation-induced G1 arrest is significantly reduced in tumor cells, (3) the disruption of G1-block modulating factor(s) other than p53 may be an important step in carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Diminished capacity for p53 in mediating a radiation-induced G1 arrest in established human tumor cell lines. 747 18

p53 shows its tumor suppresser activity by inducing cell cycle arrest and/or apoptosis of tumor cells and these activities are in part mediated by p21 cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (also called as WAF1, Cip1 and SDI1). Using human aortic vascular smooth muscle cells, here we demonstrate that adenovirus vector expressing p53-induced p21, cell cycle arrest at G1 and G2/M boundary, and accumulation of cells in G1 subgroup. However, adenovirus vector expressing p21 induced only G1 cell cycle arrest. The adenovirus vector expressing p53 was 200 times more cytotoxic to human aortic vascular smooth muscle cells than adenovirus vector expressing p21. These results suggest that adenovirus expressing p53 induces cytotoxicity in human vascular smooth muscle cells by apoptosis and this cytotoxicity can not be fully accounted by p21 induction.
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PMID:Consequences of p53 gene expression by adenovirus vector on cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in human aortic vascular smooth muscle cells. 748 76

Incubating human cells in diethylmaleate (DEM) depletes the intracellular pool of reduced glutathione (GSH) and increases the concentration of oxidative free radicals. We found that DEM-induced oxidative stress reduced the ability of p53 to bind its consensus recognition sequence and to activate transcription of a p53-specific reporter gene. Nevertheless, DEM treatment induced expression of WAF1/CIP1 but not GADD45 mRNA. The fact that N-acetylcysteine, a precursor of GSH that blocks oxidative stress, prevented WAF1/CIP1 induction by DEM suggests that WAF1/CIP1 induction probably was a consequence of the ability of DEM to reduce intracellular GSH levels. DEM induced WAF1/CIP1 expression in Saos-2 and T98G cells, both of which lack functional p53 protein. DEM treatment did not produce an increase in membrane-associated protein kinase C, but ERK2, a mitogen-activated protein kinase, was phosphorylated in a manner consistent with ERK2 activation. DEM treatment also produced a dose-dependent delay in cell cycle progression, which at low concentrations (0.25 mM) consisted of a G2/M arrest and at higher concentrations (1 mM) also involved G1 and S phase delays. Our results indicate that oxidative stress induces WAF1/CIP1 expression and arrests cell cycle progression through a mechanism that is independent of p53. This mechanism may provide for cell cycle checkpoint control under conditions that inactivate p53.
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PMID:A p53-independent pathway for activation of WAF1/CIP1 expression following oxidative stress. 749 74

The WAF1 gene, located on chromosome 6p, encodes a M(r) 21,000 protein (p21) that can arrest cell growth by associating with and inhibiting cyclin-dependent kinase complexes that are necessary for cells to exit Gr. Transcriptional activation of WAF1 can be accomplished by increasing levels of p53 protein induced by various cellular stresses, including DNA damage. Metastatic melanomas are paradoxical in that most overexpress wild-type p53 protein, yet cell growth is not inhibited. Thus, it is possible that lack of growth suppression in melanomas is due, in part, to mutations in the WAF1 gene. Therefore, we examined the entire coding region of the WAF1 gene in 24 metastatic melanoma cell lines and three normal melanocyte lines by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis and direct DNA sequencing. We similarly examined the DNA from lymphoblastoid cell lines, derived from nine individuals belonging to seven melanoma-prone families, in which haplotypes of markers on 6p cosegregate with melanoma for germline mutations in the WAF1 gene. Results indicate that (i) mutation of the WAF1 gene is an infrequent event in individuals with sporadic melanoma or predisposed to familial melanoma and (ii) the uncontrolled growth of melanoma cells is not due to mutation of the WAF1 gene. However, expression studies found a wide variation in the level of p21 protein in melanoma cells, suggesting that aberrant regulation of p21 may play a role in melanoma development. Moreover, there was no predictable relationship between p21 expression and p53 expression, indicating that other, p53-independent, pathways may be important for the regulation of p21 in melanoma cells.
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PMID:Mutations and defective expression of the WAF1 p21 tumour-suppressor gene in malignant melanomas. 749 59

SDI1 is an inhibitor of DNA synthesis that we isolated by expression screening cDNAs prepared from senescent, terminally nondividing human cells. Other groups then cloned this gene as a cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk)-interacting protein (CIP1, p21) that inhibits cdks; the gene was also isolated by screening for genes transactivated by p53 (WAF1). p53 levels are low in senescent and quiescent contact-inhibited or serum-deprived normal human cells, which we have found express high levels of SDI1 mRNA. This indicates that alternate pathways for upregulation of message level of this gene may exist. We therefore proceeded with the study presented here, treating human cells with a variety of growth-arrest-inducing agents, including some that damaged DNA, and found that RNA levels of SDI1 were increased in all cases that resulted in growth inhibition. More important, with the exception of gamma-radiation, most of these agents were able to elevate SDI1 message levels in cells lacking wild-type p53. At least two distinct kinetic profiles for RNA induction were observed, one that implicated p53 transactivation and occurred early enough to cause arrest, and another that clearly was p53 independent and suggested a role for the SDI1 gene product in the maintenance rather than in the cause of inhibition of DNA synthesis.
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PMID:Evidence for a p53-independent pathway for upregulation of SDI1/CIP1/WAF1/p21 RNA in human cells. 752 62

Although the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21SDI1 (WAF1/CIP1) has been proposed as the mediator of p53-induced cell cycle arrest following DNA damage, several stimuli now appear to induce SDI1 independent of p53 function. We have examined the behavior of p53 and SDI1 in an isogeneic model by manipulating p53 status in normal diploid human fibroblasts using an amphotropic retroviral vector. Following DNA strand break damage induced by bleomycin, both SDI1 induction and G1-S cell cycle arrest are p53 dependent, consistent with SDI1 being the key mediator. In contrast, in cellular senescence (and following UV irradiation), induction of SDI1 occurs independent of p53 function yet growth arrest is still p53 dependent. We conclude (a) that redundant pathways exist for induction of SDI1, but that (b) SDI1, while perhaps necessary, is not sufficient for inhibition of cell cycle progression, requiring the cooperation of an additional factor (possibly another cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor) whose expression, at least in the case of senescence, is strictly p53 dependent.
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PMID:Mutant p53 rescues human diploid cells from senescence without inhibiting the induction of SDI1/WAF1. 753 2


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