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)

Abnormal function of p53 is commonly associated with various cancer formations. High-grade and late-stage bladder cancers have been reported to have mutated or become inactive p53 when using immunohistochemical stains. Recently, p53 codon 72 polymorphism was extensively studied to determine the risk factors responsible for cancer formation. There was a general population of codon 72 sequence polymorphism of the wild type p53. A single base change from G to C caused the alteration of amino acid residue 72 from arginine to proline. The arginine form is considered to be a significant risk factor in the development of cancer. However, various reports had indicated discrepancies with regard to this polymorphism; some showed no significant difference between the control and cancer groups, while other series were associated with high risks in the proline form homozygotes. To resolve the undefined distribution of this polymorphism in bladder cancers, 58 patients with bladder cancer were enrolled onto this study. When checked using the Chi-squared test (P = 0.952) there were no differences between the control subjects and bladder cancer patients in the distribution of polymorphism. However, proline form homozygotes were more frequently found in the invasive group than the non-invasive group by Fisher's exact test (25% and 2.9%, respectively, P < 0.001). More than 70% of the non-invasive bladder cancers were the arginine form homozygotes. This result is consistent with those reported for hepatocellular carcinoma that showed a history of chronic liver disease and proline form homozygotes in a report by Yu et al. Our data suggest that proline form homozygotes are associated with invasive bladder cancer.
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PMID:Distributions of p53 codon 72 polymorphism in bladder cancer--proline form is prominent in invasive tumor. 1112 5

Since p21WAF1/CIP1 (p21) is a universal inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases and is regulated transcriptionally by p53, which is activated by DNA stress, its expression reflects DNA stress in chronic hepatitis. Recently an association with both hepatitis B and C virus and the expression of p53 or p21 was reported. We analyzed p21 expression in 18 cases of HBV-associated chronic liver diseases and 32 cases of HCV-associated chronic liver diseases by immunohistochemical analysis, and investigated the possible association between hepatocyte p21 expression and hepatic inflammation, fibrosis, and especially hepatitis virus type. The p21-positive hepatocytes were more numerous in areas of intense inflammation and spotty necrosis and areas close to fibrosis, and they increased according to the degrees of grading and staging. The p21 labeling index (LI) in patients with liver cirrhosis was significantly higher than that in patients with chronic hepatitis of both hepatitis viral types (5.84 +/- 0.61 vs 12.0 +/- 0.83, P < 0.0001 in hepatitis B, 10.28 +/- 0.80 vs 15.6 +/- 1.09, P = 0.0004 in hepatitis C), Furthermore, the p21 LI was significantly higher in HCV-associated liver disease than in HBV-associated liver disease in every group (4.02 +/- 0.48 vs 7.74 +/- 0.96, P = 0.021 in low grade group, 7.35 +/- 0.46 vs 12.8 +/- 0.57, P < 0.0001 in high grade, 12.0 +/- 0.83 vs 15.6 +/- 1.09, P = 0.034 in liver cirrhosis). In, conclusion, p21 expression was up-regulated by the stress of inflammation and fibrosis and might be influenced by viral proteins in human chronic liver disease.
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PMID:p21WAF1/CTP1 expression and hepatitis virus type. 1168 May 78

The inflammatory cytokine interferon gamma (IFNgamma) can cause cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in the hepatocyte. Primarily these processes are protective but in chronic liver disease oncogenic mutations may prosper. IFNgamma signalling is discussed showing how p53 is induced to cause cell cycle arrest. While caspases are are known to be responsible for IFNgamma induced apoptosis, how they are activated is unclear. Potential mechanisms are reviewed.
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PMID:The effect of IFNgamma on the hepatocyte: cell cycle and apoptosis. 1184 38

Localization of P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and p53 was immunohistochemically examined in 41 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in order to determine the relationship between the expression of P-gp and p53 and the degree of histological differentiation or cell proliferation in HCC. P-gp showed different patterns of expression between cancerous and cirrhotic liver hepatocytes, and the expression in cancerous tissue also varied according to the degree of histological differentiation. In cirrhotic liver hepatocytes, expression of P-gp was found on bile canalicular membranes. In the case of cancerous tissue, P-gp was localized on the canalicular membranes in well-differentiated HCC showing a trabecular pattern, as recognized cirrhotic liver hepatocytes. In moderately differentiated HCC showing pseudo-glandular patterns, predominant expression of P-gp was found on the luminal side of cell membranes of the glandular ducts. The P-gp expression rate was 87.5% in well-differentiated HCC, 84% in moderately differentiated HCC, and 37.5% in poorly differentiated HCC, indicating a marked decrease with decreasing degree of differentiation. On the other hand, the rate of mutation of p53, a tumor suppressor gene, was 12.5% in well-differentiated HCC, 52.0% in moderately differentiated HCC, and 85.5% in poorly differentiated HCC, showing a significant increase with decreasing degree of differentiation (P<0.005). The labeling index (LI) of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) tended to increase with the progression of chronic liver disease, with a markedly high value of 24.0+/-1.5% in cases of HCC. The PCNA LI was 15.6+/-11.9% in well-differentiated HCC, 23.1+/-15.1% in moderately differentiated HCC, and 50.1+/-13.3% in poorly differentiated HCC, which indicated a significantly increase in poorly differentiated HCC (P<0.001). Thus, it became apparent that abnormal expressions of P-gp and p53 and the cell proliferation in HCC vary according to the degree of histological differentiation of the malignancy. This suggests that more effective chemotherapy for HCC can be potentially developed by considering the pattern and level of expression of P-gp as a mechanism of drug resistance and the extent of histological differentiation.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical studies on the expression of P-glycoprotein and p53 in relation to histological differentiation and cell proliferation in hepatocellular carcinoma. 1264 52

The samples of hepatocellular carcinoma from Turkey, a country with a high prevalence of hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus, but low dietary exposure to aflatoxin B1, were examined in order to detect the frequency of mutant p53 and its association with clinical and pathological data. Fifty-two samples of hepatocellular cancer from the patients who were diagnosed in our clinic were included in this study. The mutant p53 protein was searched for by specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Of 52 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, 26 (50%) had the mutant p53. The incidence of p53 mutation in hepatocellular cancer patients with chronic liver disease due to hepatitis B virus infection was significantly higher than in those with chronic liver disease due to alcohol, indicating that not alcohol but hepatitis B virus, in fact induces the mutations in p53 gene. In addition, it has been shown that the p53 mutation was significantly associated with the diameter of tumor nodule and the degree of cellular differentiation in hepatocellular cancer. The p53 mutation rate found in our study is concordant for a geography where hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus are common. Hepatitis B virus and possibly hepatitis C virus, but not alcohol, should be responsible, to a degree, for the mutational change in p53 protein in hepatocellular cancer patients with chronic liver disease. The p53 mutation is a late event in hepatocarcinogenesis because it is related with cellular differentiation and tumor diameter. The specific ELISA can be a useful screening test in future studies to select the patients for gene therapy using wild-type p53.
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PMID:Detection of mutant p53 in hepatocellular cancer from Turkey and its correlation with clinicopathologic parameters. 1277 81

Telomere maintenance and telomerase reactivation are near universal features of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), yet the shorter telomeres and highly abnormal cytogenetic profiles of HCC suggest that telomere erosion and dysfunction may be operative during the formative stages of tumorigenesis. Previous studies have established that the cancer-enhancing or suppressing impact of telomere dysfunction is highly dependent on several parameters including cell type, tumor stage, and p53 status. Here, to understand better the pathogenetic role of telomere dysfunction in the initiation and progression in human HCC, we have used three mechanistically distinct liver cancer-prone model systems (urokinase plasminogen activator transgenic mice, carbon tetrachloride exposure, and diethylnistrosamine treatment) in the context of successive generations of telomerase-deficient mice null for the telomerase RNA component, mTERC. Across all of the HCC model systems, telomere dysfunction suppressed both the incidence and growth of HCC lesions, a trend that mirrored the level of intratumoral proliferative arrest and apoptosis. On the histological level, telomere dysfunction was associated with a significant increase in the number of early stage neoplastic lesions and a reciprocal decline in the occurrence of high-grade malignancies. These genetic data in the mouse indicate that telomere dysfunction exerts an opposing role in the initiation versus progression of HCC and provide a framework for understanding the intimate link among chronic liver disease, chromosomal instability, and increased HCC in humans.
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PMID:Differential impact of telomere dysfunction on initiation and progression of hepatocellular carcinoma. 1294 29

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is one of the major causes of chronic liver disease with the potential for development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The core protein of HCV has been shown to modulate expression of various cellular genes and to influence a number of cellular functions. We investigated the effect of constitutively expressed HCV core protein on cell cycle progression in HepG2 cell line, which is derived from a differentiated human hepatoblastoma and shows biosynthetic features similar to human hepatocytes. The results indicated that stable expression of the core protein in unsynchronized HepG2 cells induced a perturbation of the cell cycle with reduced cell doubling meantime and increased S phase fraction. Increase of c-myc protein above the basal expression level was demonstrated with a significant increase of c-myc stability, as revealed by its prolonged intracellular half-life, in HepG2 expressing HCV core protein. In contrast, p53 and p21 levels were unchanged. These results suggest that HCV core protein may promote cell cycle progression in HepG2 cells possibly through increasing stability of c-myc oncoprotein. These results are in support of important role played by HCV core protein in virus-mediated pathogenesis in persistently infected hosts and in hepatocarcinogenesis.
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PMID:Cell cycle perturbation in a human hepatoblastoma cell line constitutively expressing Hepatitis C virus core protein. 1468 76

Activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) plays a role as a genome mutator in activated B cells, and inappropriate expression of AID has been implicated in the immunopathological phenotype of human B-cell malignancies. Notably, we found that the transgenic mice overexpressing AID developed lung adenocarcinoma and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), suggesting that ectopic expression of AID can lead to tumorigenesis in epithelial tissues as well. To examine the involvement of AID in the development of human HCC, we analyzed the AID expression and its correlation with mutation frequencies of the p53 gene in liver tissues from 51 patients who underwent resection of primary HCCs. The specific expression, inducibility by cytokine stimulation and mutagenic activity of AID were investigated in cultured human hepatocytes. Only trace amounts of AID transcripts were detected in the normal liver; however, endogenous AID was significantly upregulated in both HCC and surrounding noncancerous liver tissues with underlying chronic hepatitis or liver cirrhosis (p < 0.05). Most liver tissues with underlying chronic inflammation with endogenous AID upregulation already contained multiple genetic changes in the p53 gene. In both hepatoma cell lines and cultured human primary hepatocytes, the expression of AID was substantially induced by TGF-beta stimulation. Aberrant activation of AID in hepatocytes resulted in accumulation of multiple genetic alterations in the p53 gene. Our findings suggest that the aberrant expression of AID is observed in human hepatocytes with several pathological settings, including chronic liver disease and HCC, which might enhance the genetic susceptibility to mutagenesis leading to hepatocarcinogenesis.
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PMID:Expression of activation-induced cytidine deaminase in human hepatocytes during hepatocarcinogenesis. 1706 40

Since its first description 50 years ago, fibrolamellar carcinomas (FLCs) have been recognized as a unique type of primary liver cancer. FLCs occur principally in children and young adults and are not associated with chronic liver disease. Their etiology is unknown. The tumor is made up of large polygonal cells containing abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm, large vesiculated nuclei, and large nucleoli, with tumor cells that are embedded in lamellar bands of fibrosis. Although rare, the most common variant of FLC shows areas of glandular type differentiation with mucin production. The uniqueness of FLC extends to their molecular findings, as they show no evidence for involvement by many of the major pathways and genes that are dysregulated in typical hepatocellular carcinoma, including alpha-fetoprotein, TP53 mutations, and beta catenin mutations. FLCs are not indolent tumors, but have an overall better prognosis than hepatocellular carcinomas of the usual sort because of the younger age at presentation and lack of cirrhosis. The most important prognostic feature is resectability. Although their morphologic appearance on routine stains is well defined, their etiology is still unknown and much of their molecular biology remains poorly described and awaits future investigation.
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PMID:Review of the clinicopathologic features of fibrolamellar carcinoma. 1745 18

Circulating free DNA (CFDNA) has been shown to be a good source of liver tissue-derived DNA in African and Asian patients with chronic liver disease or HCC. In Egypt, HCC is a frequent carcinoma and mostly occur in the context of chronic infection by HCV, a widespread infection in the Egyptian population. Here we have examined the presence of mutations in TP53 at codon 249 (Ser-249, considered as a hallmark of mutagenesis by aflatoxin) and in CTNNB1 (gene encoding beta-catenin) in CFDNA of patients with HCC or chronic liver disease, from Alexandria, Egypt. The DNA concentrations were significantly higher in HCC patients compared to HBV and HCV carriers without cancer, and to sero-negative individuals. Ser-249 TP53 mutations were determined using PCR-restriction digestion (RFLP) in CFDNA of 255 subjects, and confirmed by sequencing. Ser-249 was found in CFDNA of 12 subjects (4.8%), with the highest prevalence in subjects with chronic liver disease and infection by HBV (6/36; 16.7%) Mutations in CTNNB1 were examined using PCR combined to DHPLC and followed by sequencing. No mutations were found in CTNNB1 neither in CFDNA or in tumour tissue. In parallel, studies on DNA extracted from 20 HCC biopsies showed the presence of ser-249 mutation in two cases (10%). These results indicate that mutagenesis by aflatoxin may play a role in hepatocarcinogenesis in Egypt, and CFDNA may serve as a convenient source of material in monitoring the effects of aflatoxin exposure and viral infections in chronic liver disease and cancer.
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PMID:Ser-249 TP53 and CTNNB1 mutations in circulating free DNA of Egyptian patients with hepatocellular carcinoma versus chronic liver diseases. 1831 40


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