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)

Molecular abnormalities of the p53 gene in chromosome 17p may be among the most commonly observed in human cancer. Their role in gastric carcinogenesis is suggested by their frequent detection in invasive adenocarcinomas. To investigate the chronology with which these abnormalities appear in the gastric carcinogenesis process, the expression of p53 proteins was investigated in late stages of the process, namely dysplasia, and in superficial carcinomas. A polyclonal antibody, CM-1, against both wild-type and mutant proteins was applied to paraffin-embedded biopsy and gastrectomy specimens previously fixed in buffered formalin. Positive nuclear stain was obtained in 36.4% of 33 cases of gastric epithelial dysplasia, corresponding to 19% of mild, 27.3% of moderate, and 64.3% of severe dysplasias. Eight of 13 (61.5%) invasive carcinomas showed positive stain. The data indicate an increased incidence of p53 abnormalities in the late stages of gastric carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical evidence of p53 overexpression in gastric epithelial dysplasia. 130 67

The authors investigated methods for analysis of oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes in lung cancers and bronchial lesions from high risk patients (retired poison gas factory workers). Amplifications of C-, L-, N-myc, length of terminal repeat array (TRA), mutations of p53 gene, p53 mRNA and K-ras genes were analysed in frozen specimens of surgically resected lung cancers. Various lesions including dysplasia, squamous metaplasia, goblet cell metaplasia, and basal cell hyperplasia were detected in the bronchial epithelium of biopsied specimens from retired poison gas factory workers. Analysis of p53 gene and k-ras gene mutations was performed on these formalin fixed, paraffin embedded samples, but no evidence of mutation has been found to date.
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PMID:[Analysis of oncogenes and suppressor genes in lung cancer and bronchial lesions from high risk group]. 130 37

Lung cancer arises after a series of morphological changes, which take several years to progress from normal epithelium to invasive cancer. The morphological changes progress from hyperplasia, to metaplasia, to dysplasia, to carcinoma in situ, to invasive cancer and finally to metastatic cancer. Multiple molecular changes have been documented in lung cancers, both small cell (SCLC) and non-small cell (NSCLC) types. The number of changes has been estimated to be in double digits. These changes include activation of dominant oncogenes myc family, (K-ras and neu genes), as well as loss of recessive growth regulatory genes or anti-oncogenes (p53, and RB as well as unidentified gene or genes on chromosome 3). However, cytogenetic and molecular genetic studies indicate that multiple other specific sites of actual or potential DNA loss may be present in lung cancers. Other changes may include development of drug resistance, and production of growth factors and their receptors. It is tempting to associate specific molecular changes with specific morphological changes, as has been attempted in the colon. However, because of the difficulties in serially sampling the respiratory tract, such studies have not been performed to date. Documentation of molecular changes in premalignant lesions and prospective studies of their prognostic effects will be necessary for the design of rational chemoprevention trials.
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PMID:The molecular biology of lung cancer. 130 9

Mutation and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in the p53 gene were analyzed in 274 colorectal tumors of 4 histopathological grades. Among 160 tumors from 40 familial adenomatous polyposis patients, none of 58 adenomas with moderate dysplasia had p53 mutations, whereas 8% (3 of 37) of severe adenomas, 15% (6 of 40) of intramucosal carcinomas, and 40% (10 of 25) of invasive carcinomas had p53 mutations. Only 3% (1 of 33) of severe adenomas showed both mutation and LOH, while 25% (6 of 24) of intramucosal carcinomas and 40% (10 of 25) of invasive carcinomas had both mutation and LOH. All intramucosal and invasive carcinomas that had mutations lost the other allele of the p53 gene. In 114 tumors from 86 non-familial adenomatous polyposis patients, similar results were obtained; no adenoma showed both mutation and LOH, but both alterations occurred in intramucosal and invasive carcinoma. As regards specificity in 56 mutations detected in the present study, the frequently affected codons were codons 175, 238, 245, 248, 273, and 282, 4 of these amino acids being arginine, and 72% (39 of 54) of all mutations were GC to AT transition. Although expression into p53 polyadenylated RNA was high in every invasive carcinoma irrespective of the presence of mutation or LOH, there was a correlation between mutation and protein level; immunostaining of p53 protein was negative in almost all adenomas, but it was positive in 86% of invasive carcinomas exhibiting p53 mutation. These data suggest that genetic changes on both alleles of the p53 gene through mutation and LOH, which result in abnormal protein accumulation, are involved in the conversion of adenoma to early carcinoma. Also, carcinoma cells with p53 mutations existing within adenoma tissues are detectable by immunostaining, even in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens.
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PMID:Genetic changes of both p53 alleles associated with the conversion from colorectal adenoma to early carcinoma in familial adenomatous polyposis and non-familial adenomatous polyposis patients. 131 35

p53 is a nuclear phosphoprotein which controls normal cell growth. Normal p53 protein is undetectable by standard immunohistochemical staining and the over-expression found in neoplastic cells correlates with the presence of point mutations of evolutionary conserved regions of the p53 gene. We examined the expression of p53 protein in a series of 36 colorectal adenomas (13 tubular, 17 tubulovillous, 6 villous) showing different degrees of dysplasia (11 mild, 19 moderate, 6 severe), 11 moderately differentiated adenocarcinomas (6 Duke's A, 4 Duke's B, 1 Duke's C) and 5 metaplastic polyps using the polyclonal antibody CM1 which recognises p53 protein in conventionally fixed and processed histological material. We found that 15 out of 36 colorectal adenomas showed p53 immunoreactivity, although in 4 positive cases (26%) the staining was very focal (less than 0.1% positive cells). More than 80% of severely dysplastic adenomas showed strong p53 immunoreactivity and this over-expression was correlated with increased cell proliferative rate as detected by the proliferating-cell-nuclear-antigen (PCNA) staining. p53 nuclear staining was also seen in 8 out of 11 (65%) colorectal adenocarcinomas as previously shown. Our data suggest that the p53 gene mutation, with the subsequent over-expression of the protein, occurs in colorectal adenomas and may therefore be a fundamental genetic event underlying the dysplasia and loss of proliferative control that are characteristic of adenomas with malignant potential.
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PMID:Over-expression of p53 nuclear oncoprotein in colorectal adenomas. 134 13

Neoplastic progression in patients with chronic ulcerative colitis (UC) is characterized by the development of epithelial dysplasia, which is accompanied by genetic abnormalities that can be detected by flow cytometric and molecular biologic methods. Distribution of and correlation between histologic abnormalities, DNA content, and loss of heterozygosity for a p53 allele (p53 LOH) in the colons of nine UC patients were analyzed. Loss of a p53 allele was found in 85% (22/26) of biopsy specimens classified histologically as carcinoma, 63% (25/40) of biopsy specimens with high grade dysplasia, and 33% (7/21) of biopsy specimens with low grade dysplasia. Loss of heterozygosity for p53 was also found in 9% (5/57) of biopsy specimens indefinite for dysplasia and in 1/18 biopsy specimens negative for dysplasia, showing that this genetic change may occur early in the histological progression towards carcinoma. Aneuploid DNA contents were more common than p53 LOH in regions with negative, indefinite or low grade dysplastic histology; moreover, p53 LOH was detected only in aneuploid cells and not in diploid epithelium. Aneuploidy alone was not as specific a marker for the concomitant presence of dysplasia or carcinoma in a biopsy sample as aneuploidy combined with p53 LOH. These findings show that aneuploidy may precede both p53 LOH and epithelial dysplasia. Two UC patients' colons contained geographically separated clones of cells with different aneuploidies that also showed loss of different p53 alleles, suggesting that neoplasia may arise within different populations of cells in separate areas of the same colon.
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PMID:Neoplastic progression in ulcerative colitis: histology, DNA content, and loss of a p53 allele. 850 Jul 56

Immunolocalization of the nuclear protein p53 tumor suppressor gene product is considered to be one of the best methods of detecting a mutated form of p53. We have studied p53 immunohistochemically by using monoclonal antibody pAb1801 in 15 cases of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Immunoreactive p53 was observed in the nuclei of tumor cells in 4% paraformaldehyde-fixed, frozen sections (12 of 15) and paraffin-embedded sections (11 of 15), but not in routinely processed (10% formalin-fixed) specimens. p53 expression was closely correlated with the malignant phenotype, including dysplasia. p53 was not observed in histologically normal mucosa, except in three cases in which scattered immunoreactivity was observed in parabasal and basal cells. Immunostaining of ki67 and proliferating cellular nuclear antigen on adjacent tissue sections revealed that p53 expression was strongly correlated with ki67 and proliferating cellular nuclear antigen in carcinoma and dysplastic cells, but not in normal mucosa, suggesting involvement of the mutated form of p53 in the cell cycle of malignant cells. Immunohistochemical patterns of p53 were not related significantly to clinicopathologic parameters in the cases examined. Therefore, p53 expression was strongly associated with the proliferation of carcinoma cells but not with that of normal cells in esophageal carcinoma.
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PMID:Expression of p53 in human esophageal carcinoma: an immunohistochemical study with correlation to proliferating cell nuclear antigen expression. 135 81

Recognition of premalignant lesions in the oral epithelium has the potential to increase survival rates for squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity. It has previously been reported that cytokeratin 19 (CK19), a 40-kd epithelial cytoskeletal protein within the suprabasal squamous epithelium, is a specific marker of moderate-to-severe dysplasia and carcinoma in situ in oral cavity squamous epithelium. In contrast, normal epithelium and hyperplastic lesions reportedly express CK19 only in the basal layer if at all. The authors chose to test and extend this hypothesis by studying suprabasal CK19 expression and dysplasia of the oral cavity and upper aerodigestive tract in paraffin-embedded specimens that had been fixed in alcohol, a superior fixative for the preservation of cytokeratins. The authors examined 56 alcohol-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens including 37 from the oral cavity, using two antibodies specific for CK19 (Ks19.1 and 4.62), an antibody to the nuclear proliferation marker, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) (19A2), and an antibody to the putative tumor suppressor gene, p53 (pAb1801). The lesions were classified as normal, hyperplasia, mild dysplasia, moderate dysplasia, severe dysplasia/carcinoma in situ, or invasive squamous cell carcinoma, following standard histologic criteria. Immunocytochemically stained sections were scored for the presence or absence of suprabasal CK19, suprabasal PCNA, and p53 positivity, regardless of location. The immunostaining patterns of the two anti-CK19 antibodies were essentially equivalent. Except for one laryngeal specimen, normal epithelium, when positive, showed CK19 expression only in scattered cells throughout the basal layer. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen-positive nuclei were found exclusively in the basal layer. In areas of hyperplasia, CK19 immunostaining was absent or confined to the basal layer in 20 of 38 specimens and was expressed in suprabasal cells in 18 of 38 hyperplastic specimens. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen immunostaining in all cases of hyperplasia was limited to the basal layer. Severe dysplasia and carcinoma in situ showed suprabasal CK19 staining in six of nine specimens and no CK19 staining in three of nine specimens. In contrast, suprabasal PCNA immunostaining was found in all dysplasia and carcinoma in situ cases. p53 expression was detected in three of nine severe dysplasia/CIS specimens and was immunocytochemically undetectable in all normal, hyperplasia, and mild to moderate dysplasia specimens. The authors conclude that suprabasal CK19 expression is neither a sensitive nor a specific marker of premalignancy in oral epithelium and cannot be used to distinguish hyperplasia from dysplasia. In contrast, a strong correlation between suprabasal expression of PCNA, a marker for proliferating cells, and dysplasia/carcinoma in situ was evident.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Markers for dysplasia of the upper aerodigestive tract. Suprabasal expression of PCNA, p53, and CK19 in alcohol-fixed, embedded tissue. 138 38

Cytogenetic and p53 mutation analysis in two cases of severe dysplasia of the bronchial epithelium in lung cancer patients and p53 immunostaining in a third one are reported. The finding of both chromosomal deletions of 17p and p53 mutation indicates that these changes may take place early in the process of lung carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Deletions of 17p and p53 mutations in preneoplastic lesions of the lung. 139 34

Bronchial epithelial dysplasia is believed to precede invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the lung. Six paired dysplasia and tumour samples were distinguished histologically in sections of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded lung tissue from patients with lung cancer. Additionally, samples of dysplastic bronchial epithelium were obtained from patients without lung tumours. Microdissection of the unstained sections provided dysplastic and tumour samples from which DNA was prepared for comparison with the patients' constitutional genotype, using polymerase chain reaction-based restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. All six samples of tumour and the paired adjacent samples of bronchial dysplasia showed loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at loci on the short arm of chromosome 3. Five of the six cases showed involvement of the p53 gene as assessed by LOH at the AccII site within the gene, and by immunoreactivity to CM-1, an antibody which recognizes the mutated form of the p53 protein in paraffin-embedded material. Of the dysplastic samples, obtained from patients without invasive tumours, all three showed LOH at 3p; one sample showed LOH at the AccII polymorphic locus within the p53 gene, and another sample, uninformative at this locus, stained positively with this antibody. These results indicate that somatic genetic changes are present in preinvasive lesions in the bronchus.
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PMID:p53 and chromosome 3 abnormalities, characteristic of malignant lung tumours, are detectable in preinvasive lesions of the bronchus. 140 39


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