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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Benzene
is carcinogenic, whereas toluene is thought to have little carcinogenic potential.
Benzene
and toluene were found to activate cyclin-dependent kinase 2 in rat liver epithelial (RLE) and HL60 cells. pRb105 was hyperphosphorylated in RLE cells treated with either solvent. Kinase activation and subsequent hyperphosphorylation of pRb105 and
p53
by benzene or toluene may be responsible for their growth promotional effects, but it does not account for increased potential of benzene to induce cancer. Therefore, we examined the ability of these solvents to increase
p53
-DNA site-specific binding in RLE cells.
Benzene
increased
p53
-DNA site-specific DNA binding in RLE cells compared to control levels or the effects of toluene. Increased
p53
-DNA site-specific binding by benzene may be caused by damage to cellular DNA. If so, although both solvents appear to have promotional activity, the increased potential of benzene to damage DNA may be responsible to the difference in the ability of benzene to cause cancer.
...
PMID:Carcinogenic potential of benzene and toluene when evaluated using cyclin-dependent kinase activation and p53-DNA binding. 911 8
Mice heterozygous for a null
p53
allele were administered three well-characterized carcinogens to learn more about mechanisms of carcinogenesis and to evaluate the
p53
-deficient mouse as a tool for identifying potential human carcinogens.
Benzene
-induced sarcomas, p-cresidine-induced bladder carcinomas and phenolphthalein-induced thymic lymphomas were allelotyped at the Trp53 locus and chromosome 11 simple sequence length polymorphic (SSLP) loci. Loss of Trp53 and loss of one copy of chromosome 11 occurred in each of 10 lymphomas examined and each of the eight sarcomas examined. Loss of Trp53 and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at SSLP loci were sporadic in the bladder carcinomas. However, LOH was detected at two or more SSLP loci in six of the eight bladder tumors examined. Loss of one complete copy of chromosome 11 was implicated in three of the bladder tumors where LOH occurred at seven or more widely dispersed SSLP loci. Loss of one copy of chromosome 11 likely occurred through a
p53
-mediated selection process since Trp53 is located on mouse chromosome 11 and only one copy harbored a functional gene. The data suggest that loss occurred through a mechanism common among the three tumor types. Allelotype patterns of the maternal chromosome 11 were inconsistent with those expected from a nullizygous C57BL/6-Trp53 (N4) x inbred C57BL/6 cross which was reported for production of the mice under investigation. However, comparison with individual control tissues still allowed deduction of maternal chromosome loss. If the breeding protocols were carried out as described, the unexpected allelotype patterns observed in histologically normal tissues might be due to mitotic homologous recombination during embryogenesis.
...
PMID:Chromosome 11 allelotypes reflect a mechanism of chemical carcinogenesis in heterozygous p53-deficient mice. 1169 54
Mutagenic carcinogens rapidly induced tumors in the
p53
haploinsufficient mouse. Heterozygous
p53
-deficient (+/-) mice were exposed to different mutagenic carcinogens to determine whether
p53
loss of heterozygosity (LOH) was carcinogen-and tissue-dependent. For 26 weeks, C57BL/6 (N4) [corrected]
p53
-deficient (+/-) male or female mice were exposed to p-cresidine, benzene or phenolphthalein. Tumors were examined first for loss of the wild-type
p53
allele. p-cresidine induced
p53
LOH in three of 13 bladder tumors, whereas hepatocellular tumors showed
p53
LOH in carcinomas (2/2), but not in adenomas (0/3).
Benzene
induced
p53
LOH in 13 of 16 tumors examined. Finally, phenolphthalein induced
p53
LOH in all tumors analyzed (21/21). Analysis of the p-cresidine-induced bladder tumors by cold single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis of exon 4-9 amplicons failed to demonstrate polymorphisms associated with mutations in tumors that retained the
p53
wild-type allele. p-cresidine induced a dose-related increase in lacI mutations in bladder DNA. In summary, these data demonstrate that loss of the wild-type allele occurred frequently in thymic lymphomas and sarcomas, but less frequently in carcinomas of the urinary bladder. In the bladder carcinomas other mechanisms may be operational. These might include (i) other mechanisms of
p53
inactivation, (ii) inactivating mutations occurring outside exons 4-9 or (iii)
p53
haploinsufficiency creating a condition that favors other critical genetic events which drive bladder carcinogenesis, as evidenced by the significant decrease in tumor latency. Understanding the mechanisms of
p53
LOH and chemical carcinogenesis in this genetically altered model could lead to better models for prospective identification and understanding of potential human carcinogens and the role of the
p53 tumor suppressor
gene in different pathways of chemical carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity frequency at the Trp53 locus in p53-deficient (+/-) mouse tumors is carcinogen-and tissue-dependent. 1115 47
The aim of this study was to clarify previously reported controversial data and hypotheses concerning the effect of benzene on the cell cycle of hemopoietic stem cells. In this study, the bromodeoxyuridine UV (BUUV) suicide assay was performed in normal C57BL/6 and
p53
knockout (KO) C57BL/6 mice during and after exposure to 300 ppm of benzene for 2 weeks. Our kinetic studies revealed that the cell cycle of hemopoietic myeloid progenitor cells (colony-forming unit granulocyte-macrophage [CFU-GM]), rather than being stimulated, was suppressed by exposure to benzene. The fraction of CFU-GM in S phase was significantly depressed, from 37.1% in controls to 16.3% in normal mice. BrdUrd incorporation in both groups revealed significantly different slopes for untreated and benzene-exposed normal C57BL/6 mice.
p53
appeared to induce suppression of both the number and the cycling fraction of hemopoietic progenitor cells, as demonstrated by the lack of benzene-induced suppression of these parameters in
p53
KO mice. The likelihood that suppression of bone marrow cellularity and cell cycling is mediated by
p53
was supported by the upregulation of p21, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor. Our present study revealed the mechanism of action of benzene hematotoxicity.
Benzene
suppresses the cell cycle by
p53
-mediated overexpression of p21, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, resulting not simply in suppression of hemopoiesis but rather in a dynamic change of hemopoiesis during and after benzene exposure. Thus, the controversies raised by previously reported data are resolved by our present findings of hemopoietic stem cell kinetics.
...
PMID:Mechanism of action of benzene toxicity: cell cycle suppression in hemopoietic progenitor cells (CFU-GM). 1127 54
Benzene
, a carcinogen that induces chromosomal breaks, is strongly associated with leukemias in humans. Possible genetic determinants of benzene susceptibility include proteins involved in repair of benzene-induced DNA damage. The catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs), encoded by Prkdc, is one such protein. DNA-PKcs is involved in the nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway of DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair. Here we compared the toxic effects of benzene on mice (C57BL/6 and 129/Sv) homozygous for the wild-type Prkdc allele and mice (129/SvJ) homozygous for a Prkdc functional polymorphism that leads to diminished DNA-PK activity and enhanced apoptosis in response to radiation-induced damage. Male and female mice were exposed to 0, 10, 50, or 100 ppm benzene for 6 h/d, 5 d/week for 2 weeks. Male mice were more susceptible to benzene toxicity compared with females. Hematotoxicity was evident in all male mice but was not seen in female mice. We observed similar, large increases in both micronucleated erythrocyte populations in all male mice. Female mice had smaller but significant increases in micronucleated cells. The
p53
-dependent response was induced in all strains and genders of mice following benzene exposure, as indicated by an increase in p21 mRNA levels in bone marrow that frequently corresponded with cell cycle arrest in G2/M. Prkdc does not appear to be a significant genetic susceptibility factor for acute benzene toxicity. Moreover, the role of NHEJ, mediated by DNA-PK, in restoring genomic integrity following benzene-induced DSB remains equivocal.
...
PMID:Variations in Prkdc and susceptibility to benzene-induced toxicity in mice. 1285 42
Although the mechanisms underlying benzene-induced toxicity and leukemogenicity are not yet fully understood, they are likely to be complicated by various pathways, including those of metabolism, growth factor regulation, oxidative stress, DNA damage, cell cycle regulation, and programmed cell death. With this as a background, we performed cDNA microarray analyses on mouse bone marrow tissue during and after a 2-week benzene exposure by inhalation. Our goal was to clarify the mechanisms underlying the hematotoxicity and leukemogenicity induced by benzene at the level of altered multigene expression. Because a few researchers have postulated that the cell cycle regulation mediated by
p53
is a critical event for benzene-induced hematotoxicity, the present study was carried out using
p53
-knockout (KO) mice and C57BL/6 mice. On the basis of the results of large-scale gene expression studies, we conclude the following: (a)
Benzene
induces DNA damage in cells at any phase of the cell cycle through myeloperoxidase and in the redox cycle, resulting in
p53
expression through Raf-1 and cyclin D-interacting myb-like protein 1. (b) For G1/S cell cycle arrest, the
p53
-mediated pathway through p21 is involved, as well as the pRb gene-mediated pathway. (c) Alteration of cyclin G1 and Wee-1 kinase genes may be related to the G2/M arrest induced by benzene exposure. (d) DNA repair genes such as Rad50 and Rad51 are markedly downregulated in
p53
-KO mice. (e)
p53
-mediated caspase 11 activation, aside from
p53
-mediated Bax gene induction, may be an important pathway for cellular apoptosis after benzene exposure. Our results strongly suggest that the dysfunction of the
p53
gene, possibly caused by strong and repeated genetic and epigenetic effects of benzene on candidate leukemia cells, may induce fatal problems such as those of cell cycle checkpoint, apoptosis, and the DNA repair system, finally resulting in hemopoietic malignancies. Our cDNA microarray data provide valuable information for future investigations of the mechanisms underlying the toxicity and leukemogenicity of benzene.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of benzene-induced hematotoxicity and leukemogenicity: cDNA microarray analyses using mouse bone marrow tissue. 1294 Feb 87
Benzene
is a potent human leukemogen but the mechanism underlying benzene-induced leukemia remains an enigma due to a number of questions regarding the requirement of extraordinarily long exposure, a relatively low incidence of leukemia for genotoxicity of metabolites and a narrow dose range for leukemogenicity over marrow aplasia (overdoses tend to result in marrow aplasia). Moreover, there were previous controversies as to whether the cell cycle is upregulated or suppressed by the benzene exposure. Subsequently, it was found that the cell cycle is suppressed, but how leukemia develops under such suppression of hemopoiesis remains to be clarified. These questions were fortunately resolved with much effort.
Benzene
exposure was found to induce the expression of p21, an interlocking counterdevice for cell cycle: due to
p53
upregulation, thereby inducing the immediate suppression of the kinetics of hemopoietic progenitors followed by the prominent suppression of hemopoiesis. Intermittent benzene exposure (i.e., cessation of exposure during weekends, for example) allowed an immediate recovery from marrow suppression after terminating exposure, which induced continuous oscillatory changes in marrow hemopoiesis.
Benzene
-induced leukemia was chiefly due to such an oscillatory change in hemopoiesis, which epigenetically developed leukemia more than 1 year later. The mechanisms of benzene-induced leukemogenicity seem to differ between wild-type mice and mice lacking
p53
. For
p53
knockout mice, DNA damage such as weak mutagenicity or chromosomal damage was retained, and such damage induced consequent activation of proto-oncogenes and related genes, which led cells to undergo further neoplastic changes. In contrast, for wild-type mice carrying the
p53
gene, a marked oscillatory change in the cell cycle of the stem cell compartment seems to be important. Compatible and discriminative gene expression profiling between the
p53
knockout mice and wild-type mice was observed after benzene exposure by microarray analyses.
...
PMID:Mechanism of benzene-induced hematotoxicity and leukemogenicity: current review with implication of microarray analyses. 1550 59
Benzene
toxicity has long been thought to be due to its metabolites including reactive oxygen species (ROS). However, the major toxicological effect of benzene in wild-type mice carrying normal alleles of the
p53
gene appears to be the significant perturbation of cell cycle regulation, possibly via an indirect signaling pathway. Other prominent genotoxic cellular damage can occur in the absence of cell cycle arrest in
p53
gene deficiency. The suppression of cell cycle is clearly detected using a tool for stem-cell-specific cell cycle observation by the BU-UV method. Cells (including hemopoietic progenitor cells) in S-phase are labeled in vivo with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and then exposed to near-ultraviolet (UV) light to kill cells that incorporated BrdU. The target fraction, the S-phase, is then evaluated on the basis of decreased numbers of hemopoietic colonies formed in assays such as for granulomacrophage colony-forming units (CFU-GM).
Benzene
toxicity was found to be more prominent in the primitive stem-cell compartment, as first suggested more than 20 years ago. Interestingly, when one examines the stem-cell-specific steady-state gene expression profiling, several key genes associated with benzene exposure are specifically identified, including CYP2E1.
Benzene
toxicity was found to be mediated by aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) at an expression level; thus, the effect of benzene can be detected in nature at lower levels in the stem-cell compartment than expected. Alterations in gene expression profiles compared with those in steady-state gene expression profiles in the stem-cell compartment may elucidate the mechanism underlying benzene toxicity. Functional gene expressions after benzene exposure are not always detected, because their phenotypic expressions are often masked by the balance of expression of genes participating in various pathways of homeostasis, for example,
p53
. Thus, the actual expressions of the above-mentioned cell cycle-related genes may not be clearly detected. However, when one examines the genes after benzene exposure without
p53
gene participation (i.e.,
p53
was knocked out), various cell cycle-related genes expressed during and after benzene exposure are identified, such as cyclin B1, cyclin D3 and growth hormone in the bone marrow. Since age-related impairments of
p53
gene function in somatic cells are known, the possible alteration of those genes would be based not only on a theoretical model, but possible risks posed on the elderly should also be taken into consideration.
...
PMID:p53-dependent gene profiling for reactive oxygen species after benzene inhalation: special reference to genes associated with cell cycle regulation. 1593 13
Benzene
is a recognized hematotoxicant and carcinogen that produces genotoxic damage. DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) are one of the most severe DNA lesions caused directly and indirectly by benzene metabolites. DSB may lead to chromosome aberrations, apoptosis and hematopoietic progenitor cell suppression. We hypothesized that genetic polymorphisms in genes involved in DNA DSB repair may modify benzene-induced hematotoxicity. We analyzed one or more single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in each of seven candidate genes (WRN,
TP53
, NBS1, BRCA1, BRCA2, XRCC3 and XRCC4) in a study of 250 workers exposed to benzene and 140 controls in China. Four SNPs in WRN (Ex4 -16 G > A, Ex6 +9 C > T, Ex20 -88 G > T and Ex26 -12 T > G), one SNP in
TP53
(Ex4 +119 C > G) and one SNP in BRCA2 (Ex11 +1487 A > G) were associated with a statistically significant decrease in total white blood cell (WBC) counts among exposed workers. The SNPs in WRN and
TP53
remained significant after accounting for multiple comparisons. One or more SNPs in WRN had broad effects on WBC subtypes, with significantly decreased granulocyte, total lymphocyte, CD4(+)-T cell, CD8(+)-T cell and monocyte counts. Haplotypes of WRN were associated with decreased WBC counts among benzene-exposed subjects. Likewise, subjects with
TP53
Ex4 +119 C > G variant had reduced granulocyte, CD4(+)-T cell and B cell counts. The effect of BRCA2 Ex11 +1487 A > G polymorphism was limited to granulocytes. These results suggest that genetic polymorphisms in WRN,
TP53
and BRCA2 that maintain genomic stability impact benzene-induced hematotoxicity.
...
PMID:Polymorphisms in genes involved in DNA double-strand break repair pathway and susceptibility to benzene-induced hematotoxicity. 1672 35
Benzene
and ethylene oxide are multisite carcinogens in rodents and classified as human carcinogens by the National Toxicology Program. In 2-year mouse studies, both chemicals induced mammary carcinomas. We examined spontaneous, benzene-, and ethylene oxide-induced mouse mammary carcinomas for
p53 protein
expression, using immunohistochemistry, and
p53
(exons 5-8) and H-ras (codon 61) mutations using cycle sequencing techniques.
p53 protein
expression was detected in 42% (8/19) of spontaneous, 43% (6/14) of benzene-, and 67% (8/12) of ethylene oxide-induced carcinomas. However, semiquantitative evaluation of
p53 protein
expression revealed that benzene- and ethylene oxide-induced carcinomas exhibited expression levels five- to six-fold higher than spontaneous carcinomas.
p53
mutations were found in 58% (7/12) of spontaneous, 57% (8/14) of benzene-, and 67% (8/12) of ethylene oxide-induced carcinomas. H-ras mutations were identified in 26% (5/19) of spontaneous, 50% (7/14) of benzene-, and 33% (4/12) of ethylene oxide-induced carcinomas. When H-ras mutations were present, concurrent
p53
mutations were identified in 40% (2/5) of spontaneous, 71% (5/7) of benzene-, and 75% (3/4) of ethylene oxide-induced carcinomas. Our results demonstrate that
p53
and H-ras mutations are relatively common in control and chemically induced mouse mammary carcinomas although both chemicals can alter the mutational spectra and more commonly induce concurrent mutations.
...
PMID:Frequent p53 and H-ras mutations in benzene- and ethylene oxide-induced mammary gland carcinomas from B6C3F1 mice. 1716 33
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