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)
The murine glial fibrillary acid protein (GFAP) gene is located on chromosome 11 in close proximity to the genes encoding transforming protein
p53
(Trp53) and
myeloperoxidase
(Mpo). Both Trp53 and Mpo have been mapped to human chromosome 17, but the chromosomal assignment of human GFAP has not been previously determined. In this report, we have amplified a cDNA fragment encoding a portion of GFAP from human brain and have used this probe to screen a mouse x human somatic cell hybrid panel. The results show that a human-specific GFAP species of approx 3.7 kb maps to one of these lines, TMS5, which contains chromosome 17 as its only human chromosome. On the basis of these data we speculate that there may be evolutionary relatedness between GFAP and other genes that map to both murine chromosome 11 and human chromosome 17.
...
PMID:Glial fibrillary acid protein, an astrocytic-specific marker, maps to human chromosome 17. 165 31
We examined samples of tumors of human breast, ovary, and colon of various degrees of malignancy for the expression of
p53 protein
, using a panel of anti-
p53
antibodies and
peroxidase
immunohistochemistry. Of 66 tumor cases (24 cases of ovarian carcinoma, 23 cases of colon adenocarcinoma, and 19 cases of breast carcinoma), 36 (53%) showed high levels of expression of
p53
using a human-specific antibody, and 16 (24%) showed high expression of a mutant form of
p53
. In the mutant p53-positive breast tumor samples, six (86%) were positive for HER-2/neu reactivity, compared with colon (0/4) and ovarian tumors (1/5). The pattern of
p53
intracellular localization and tissue distribution, and the relationship between the expression of mutant p53 and cell differentiation, were also examined; poorly differentiated cells showed either overexpression of
p53
or higher levels of mutant p53 in comparison with more normal cells.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of p53 and HER-2/neu proteins in human tumors. 168 Aug 97
Ultrastructural, flow cytometric, and molecular studies were performed on leukemia cells from bone marrow and pleural effusion of a 6-year-old boy diagnosed with undifferentiated (MO) leukemia, using routine histology and immunostains at diagnosis and relapse. Ultrastructurally, surface and/or intracellular ferritin particles were present on or in some blasts and the majority of blasts contained identifiable acid ferrocyanide reactive inorganic iron comparable to that seen in normal early erythroblasts. The cells lacked other evidence of differentiation, including diaminobenzidine-reactive or immunoreactive hemoglobin. Flow cytometric analysis of malignant cells showed a lack of lymphoid or myeloid markers. Anti-transferrin receptor antibody was positive on 93% of cells and antibody to glycophorin A reacted with 23% of cells. RNA blot analysis of leukemia cells with
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) showed an absence of appreciable levels of
MPO
mRNA. Chromosome analysis showed 51,XY, t(1;16)(p31;q24), +6, +10, +15, +19, +21. The oncogene c-myb, which is specifically expressed and regulated in hematopoietic cells and produces a DNA-binding protein responsible for myeloid differentiation, was found to be duplicated in the patient's tumor cells. Expression of c-jun, N-ras, c-myc, and
p53
was normal. The data indicate that the malignant cells in this patient are of early erythroid lineage at diagnosis and relapse and that classification of cell lineage can be enhanced by ultrastructural Prussian blue staining. The failure of this otherwise undifferentiated leukemia to express or evolve into a myeloid phenotype is biologically and clinically distinct from previously described cases of erythroid and myeloid leukemia and may represent a previously unidentified phenotype which should be included in the spectrum of 'undifferentiated' childhood leukemia.
...
PMID:Childhood undifferentiated leukemia with early erythroid markers and c-myb duplication. 170 34
The
p53
gene is a tumor suppressor gene located on chromosome 17p. Deletions of this chromosome and point mutations of
p53
have been implicated in the development of colonic neoplasms. We have analyzed the loss of heterozygosity of the human
p53 tumor suppressor
gene in 40 cases of colorectal carcinoma using two restriction fragment length polymorphisms detected by BglII and AccII restriction enzymes.
p53
gene product expression was studied immunohistochemically in 64 colorectal carcinomas, 18 adenomas, and 40 normal colonic mucosae using an anti-human
p53
monoclonal antibody (Pab 1801) and the avidin-biotin-
peroxidase
complex technique. Twelve of the 40 patients (30%) were polymorphic for the
p53
gene. In ten of these informative patients (83%), the tumor samples showed the loss of one allele when compared with normal colorectal samples of the same patient. One of the homozygous patients showed a loss of both
p53
alleles.
p53
immunostaining was observed in 43 of 64 carcinomas (67%) but only in two adenomas (11%). These two positive adenomas showed areas of carcinoma in situ. The normal mucosa was always negative. No relation could be found between
p53
immunostaining and the degree of differentiation, the extension of the tumor, or the Ki-67 proliferative index. Mucinous carcinomas and right-side carcinomas were less
p53
immunoreactive (25% and 52%, respectively) than the usual adenocarcinomas (73%) and distal tumors (72%). These findings suggest that
p53
may be a target of chromosome 17 deletions and that this gene may play a role in the malignant transformation of adenomas. BglII and AccII restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of the
p53
gene may be a useful and direct technique to detect allelic loss of this gene in tumors.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity of p53 gene and p53 protein expression in human colorectal carcinomas. 186 64
Evidence is accumulating that the
p53
anti-oncogene is a key gene in the genesis of carcinoma in human colon and rectum. Although mutations of the
p53
gene have been shown to be frequent, the protein was present in only approximately 50 percent of specimens examined. However only one monoclonal antibody recognizing an epitope present on wild-type
p53
had been used. We studied the
p53
expression in a series of 16 colorectal carcinoma specimens using 3 different monoclonal antibodies (pAb 421, 1801, 240). Specific immunofluorescent staining was quantified by dual parameter (DNA/
p53
) flow cytometry. Two different types of preparations were compared in order to verify the conservation of the antigen. Nuclear suspensions prepared from frozen tumor fragments were shown to produce results equivalent to those of whole cell preparations originating from fresh surgical specimens. The
p53 protein
was detected in 9 of the 16 cancers with pAb 421 and 240 monoclonal antibodies (8 of which were also positive for pAb 1801 antibody). Four additional tumors were considered positive for pAb 240 antibody alone. Overall, 13/16 cancer specimens were shown to present immunoreactivity for pAb 240 antibody. Topography of staining was investigated by immunohistochemistry with
peroxidase
methods. Eight cases were informative, 6 of which presented nuclear staining compatible with the cytometry results. There was one discordant case i.e. pAb 240 antibody being positive on cytometry and entirely negative on immunohistochemistry. This small series allowed us to show that 81 percent of tumor samples stained with monoclonal antibody pAb 240, considered to be specific to mutated protein, and that some tumors express a
p53 protein
which is not detected with terminal sequence-specific antibodies.
...
PMID:[Immunochemical evidence of a mutated p53 protein expressed in human colorectal adenocarcinoma]. 191 31
A recently established model for local breast cancer recurrence using the 13762NF rat mammary adenocarcinoma was used to evaluate biologic and biochemical properties related to clinical outcome for this class of tumors. Sublines isolated from local tumor regrowths following surgical resection differed from each other and from the 'parental' cell lines for multiple phenotypes, including metastatic propensity. Local recurrence- and primary tumor-derived sublines were examined by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE), lectin binding to electrophoretically separated proteins, and
lactoperoxidase
-catalyzed cell surface iodination; and differential protein patterns were compared to tumor progression and metastatic potential. 2D-PAGE revealed several quantitatively different spots which correlated with lung colonization potential. In particular, quantities of an apparently unique, non-cell-surface protein, P50.9 (Mr approximately 50,900, pI approximately 7.3) correlated inversely with metastatic propensity, suggesting that it may be associated with, among other possibilities, the negative regulation of the metastatic phenotype. P50.9 was unrelated to four similarly sized metastasis-associated proteins--tumor autocrine motility factor; the rat analog of tumor suppressor,
p53
; rat cytokeratin 14 or procathepsin D--as determined by amino acid analysis. A major wheat germ agglutinin binding sialoglycoprotein, gp93 (Mr approximately 93,000), was present in smaller amounts as cells were passaged in vivo and re-established as in vitro cultures [MTF7 greater than 'primary' tumor-derived lines (sc1, sc3) much greater than local recurrence-derived lines (LR1, LR1a, LR3, LR4, LR5, LR6)]. Besides cell surface glycoprotein losses, two of six local recurrence-derived sublines expressed a wheat germ agglutinin-binding sialoglycoprotein, gp110 (Mr approximately 110,000), previously undetected on any of the other cell lines including the parental populations. gp110 was found in LR3 and LR6 which were relatively highly metastatic; however, correlation with metastatic potential failed because gp110 was not present on the metastatic parental cell line, MTF7. These results demonstrate specific quantitative and qualitative protein differences associated with the selection of locally recurrent mammary tumors.
...
PMID:Tumor progression- and metastasis-associated proteins identified using a model of locally recurrent rat mammary adenocarcinomas. 222 68
The expression of the
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) gene was studied, by means of Northern blot analysis in 14 cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 11 cases of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and 6 cases of CML blast crisis, and in HL60 cells before and after induction of terminal differentiation with retinoic acid (RA), phorbol esters (TPA), or vitamin D. The expression of a panel of cell cycle-related genes, namely C-MYC, histone H3, ornithine decarboxylase,
P53
, vimentin, and calcyclin, was also studied in the same cell populations. Our results indicate that: (a)
MPO
gene expression (steady state mRNA levels) is strictly confined to the first stages of myeloid differentiation, reaching its peak at the promyelocyte stage and becoming undetectable in mature granulocytes and monocytes; (b) cells devoid of any detectable
MPO
enzymatic activity such as leukemic basophils have a high content of
MPO
mRNA; and (c)
MPO
gene expression is not related to the growth activity of the cell population. Finally, our results show that the pattern of expression of growth-regulated genes in the neoplastic myeloid disorders AML, CML, and CML blast crisis is remarkably different.
...
PMID:Expression of the myeloperoxidase gene in acute and chronic myeloid leukemias: relationship to the expression of cell cycle-related genes. 254
We used somatic-cell hybrids, containing as their only human genetic contribution part or all of chromosome 17, as donors for chromosome-mediated gene transfer. A total of 54 independent transfectant clones were isolated and analyzed by use of probes or isoenzymes for greater than 20 loci located on chromosome 17. By combining the data from this chromosome-mediated gene transfer transfectant panel, conventional somatic-cell hybrids containing well-defined breaks on chromosome 17, and in situ hybridization, we propose the following order for these loci: pter-(
TP53
-RNP2-D17S1)-(MYH2-MYH1)-D17Z 1-CRYB1-(ERBA1-GCSF-NGL)-acute promyelocytic leukemia breakpoint-RNU2-HOX2-(NGFR-COLIAI-
MPO
)-GAA-UM PH-GHC-TK1-GALK-qter. Using chromosome-mediated gene transfer, we have also regionally localized the random probes D17S6 to D17S19 on chromosome 17.
...
PMID:Construction of a genetic map of human chromosome 17 by use of chromosome-mediated gene transfer. 318 46
A molecular complex of simian virus 40 large tumor antigen (T-Ag) and
p53
cellular protein is present on the surface of simian virus 40-transformed mouse cells. The stability of the association of the two proteins with the cell surface was characterized. Cells were either surface iodinated by the
lactoperoxidase
technique or metabolically labeled with [35S]methionine, and surface antigens were detected by differential immunoprecipitation with specific antibodies immediately after labeling or after incubation at 37 degrees C. A rapid, concomitant disappearance of T-Ag and
p53
from the cell surface was observed. The half-life of iodinated surface T-Ag was less than 30 min, whereas that of [35S]methionine-labeled surface T-Ag was 1 to 2 h. Although T-Ag and
p53
were rapidly lost, both were also rapidly replaced on the cell surface, since newly exposed molecules could be detected when cells were reiodinated after a 2-h chase period. Control experiments established that the loss of the surface molecules was not induced by the iodination reaction. The appearance of surface T-Ag was prevented when cellular protein synthesis was inhibited with cycloheximide. The disappearance and replacement of T-Ag and
p53
appeared to be energy-independent processes, as neither was inhibited by sodium azide or 2,4-dinitrophenol. Incubation of iodinated cells at 4 degrees C did block the loss of T-Ag and
p53
. These observations suggest that T-Ag and
p53
are coordinately turned over in the plasma membrane. The nature of the association of the T-Ag-
p53
complex with the cell surface can best be described as highly dynamic.
...
PMID:Dynamic nature of the association of large tumor antigen and p53 cellular protein with the surfaces of simian virus 40-transformed cells. 669 Jul 21
Immunohistochemical
peroxidase
staining for
p53 protein
was performed on 22 condyloma acuminatum tissue samples from patients infected with human papillomavirus (HPV). The purpose of our study was to understand the benign character of this syndrome. The patients studied were infected by HPV type 6 and 11. Two monoclonal antibodies, PAbs DO-1 and 240, were used to detect the
p53 protein
. Overexpression of wild-type
p53
was found in the nuclei of the basal cell layers. In healthy tissues and non-infected patients no
p53 protein
expression was detected. We would like to speculate that infection with HPVs and their viral protein E7, which is implicated in disruption of normal growth, may regulate the induction of wild-type
p53
over-expression, as is known for DNA-damaging agents such as UV- or X-radiation.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of p53 protein expression in HPV-induced condyloma acuminatum. 754 19
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>