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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Colorectal carcinoma is a major cause of death throughout the Western world. It is increasingly recognized that any reduction in mortality must be achieved through the detection and removal of early and precancerous lesions. The primary attention for such a preventive strategy has been the polypoid adenoma and surveillance studies have shown a significant reduction in the incidence of carcinoma through systematic polypectomy of suspicious lesions. A potential problem with such a program, however, is raised by reports from Japan that some carcinomas seem to arise without a precursor polypoid adenoma, that is de novo. Although the histopathologic findings in such reports seem to clearly support this idea, this concept is not widely accepted in the Western world. We undertook a series of immunohistochemical (
p53
, bcl-2, Mib-1,
E-cadherin
, CD44, Stromelysin-3), and microsatellite analysis studies (on 17p (
p53
), 18q (DCC), 5q (APC), 8p, 2p and 1p), on groups of de novo and ex adenoma carcinomas in order to see if differences between the two groups of lesions exist. The results of these studies demonstrate that de novo carcinomas share several phenotypic and genotypic features with ex adenoma carcinoma (similar CD44 in the carcinomas, similar rates of LOH at APC and DCC loci), but have significantly higher rates of LOH at 17p,
p53
over-expression and ST-3 expression indicating that tumor progression in de novo carcinoma is accelerated. These findings should help clarify the concept of de novo carcinoma and contribute to wider recognition of this important clinicopathologic entity.
...
PMID:[Are there differences between ex adenoma and de novo colorectal carcinomas?]. 1071 4
The trefoil peptide family is comprised of three small peptides (designated pS2, SP, and ITF) exhibiting a unique motif of three intrachain loops formed by disulfide bonds. These highly protease-resistant peptides are secreted onto the mucosal surface by goblet cells or their equivalents. Most importantly, these factors protect epithelium from injury and promote repair through restitution after injury has occurred. Targeted deletion of the gene encoding ITF results in exquisite sensitivity to colonic injury by standard agents (e.g., dextran sodium sulfate) due to an inability to repair the epithelium. Studies have led to insight into the intracellular responses to trefoil peptides, including ras-dependent MAP kinase activation and activation of epidermal growth factor receptor. Among other effects, activation of these pathways is associated with redistribution of
E-cadherin
from the cell surface to intracellular domains, where it is complexed with catenins, and phosphorylation of akt, inactivating this kinase associated with apoptosis. In addition, trefoil peptides appear to block both
p53
dependent and
p53
independent apoptosis through pathways associated with activation of EGFR and P13 kinase. These observations suggest that trefoil peptides elicit a coordinated cellular response enabling cell migration without triggering the programmed cell death response usually precipitated by cell detachment from a stationary anchored state.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of regulatory peptide action in the gastrointestinal tract: trefoil peptides. 1077 22
Non-squamous cell carcinoma is a rare but distinct neoplasm of the upper aerodigestive tract. Among these carcinomas, basaloid-squamous cell carcinoma (BSCC) has frequently been confused with adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) and mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the upper aerodigestive tract. In this study, we examined immunohistochemically the expression of differentiation-related substances, including cytokeratin (CK) subtypes,
p53
and p27, and cell adhesion-related molecules
E-cadherin
and alpha-catenin to clarify the biological features of these neoplasms. We studied seven cases of BSCC of the oesophagus, five cases of ACC and seven cases of mucoepidermoid carcinoma. Squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma of the oesophagus and trachea were also studied for comparison. Among the cytokeratin subtypes examined, CK14, CK17 and CK19 immunoreactivity was detected in BSCC. ACC and mucoepidermoid carcinoma were immunopositive for CK8, CK14 and CK17 and for CK8, CK14, CK17 and CK19, respectively. These findings suggest that CK subtypes, especially CK8, CK14 and CK17, are useful in differentiating these malignancies. BSCC was more frequently associated with decreased
E-cadherin
and alpha-catenin immunoreactivity than ACC and mucoepidermoid carcinoma. Nuclear
p53
immunoreactivity was detected more frequently in BSCC (5 out of 7) than in ACC (2 out of 5) and mucoepidermoid carcinoma (4 out of 7). There were no significant differences in p27 immunoreactivity among these carcinomas. Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) immunoreactivity was detected in mucoepidermoid carcinoma (2 out of 7), SCC (8 out of 11) and adenocarcinoma (9 out of 9), but it was not detected in BSCC (7) or ACC (5). Carbohydrate antigen 19-9 (CA19-9) immunoreactivity was detected only in mucoepidermoid carcinoma (4 out of 7) and adenocarcinoma, but not in BSCC, ACC, or SCC. These findings indicate that BSCC, ACC and mucoepidermoid carcinoma are distinct neoplasms arising in the upper aerodigestive tract. In addition, decreased expression of
E-cadherin
and alpha-catenin proteins and increased
p53
expression in BSCC may be correlated with aggressive behaviour.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical study of basaloid squamous cell carcinoma, adenoid cystic and mucoepidermoid carcinoma in the upper aerodigestive tract. 1081 Apr 23
We present ten cases of mammographically detected lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS), involving a single area of variable size (up to a quadrant) in seven cases and the entire gland in three cases. Histologically, calcifications were associated with necrotic central areas within the in situ carcinomatous foci. Multiple foci of LCIS were observed in all five cases in which mastectomy had been performed. Cytologically, the lesions were characterized by a solid proliferation of round noncohesive cells with nuclei of intermediate size. Immunocytochemically, all cases were
E-cadherin
and
p53
negative, and c-ErbB-2, GCDFP-15 and estrogen receptor positive. The proliferation index, evaluated with Ki67, was in the low range. Four cases were associated with foci of infiltrating lobular carcinoma (ILC). These findings contradict the commonly held opinion that LCIS is not mammographically detectable because of its lack of necrosis and calcification. This study documents the existence of a variant of LCIS exhibiting the mammographic features and central necrosis classically associated with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), while retaining the spatial distribution, cytological composition and immunocytochemical features of lobular carcinoma.
...
PMID:Mammographically detected in situ lobular carcinomas of the breast. 1088 35
The clinical implications of understanding the invasive and metastatic proclivities of an individual patient's tumour are substantial because the choice of systemic therapy needs to be guided by the likelihood of occult metastasis as well as by knowing when the metastases will become overt. Malignant potential is dynamic, progressing throughout the natural history of a tumour. Required of tumours is the development of critical phenotypic attributes: growth, angiogenesis, invasion and metastagenicity. Characterisation of the extent of tumour progression with regard to these major tumour phenotypes should allow the fashioning of individual therapy for each patient. To examine the clinical parameters and molecularly characterise the metastatic proclivity we have been studying a series of regionally treated breast cancer patients who received no systemic therapy and have long follow-up. Clinically we describe two parameters: metastagenicity - the metastatic proclivity of a tumour, and virulence--the rate at which these metastases appear. Both attributes increase with tumour size and nodal involvement. However, within each clinical group there is a cured population, even in those with extensive nodal involvement, underscoring the heterogeneity of breast cancers within each group and the need for further molecular characterisation. Using biomarkers that characterise the malignant phenotype we have determined that there is progression in the phenotypic changes. Angiogenesis and loss of nm23 are earlier events than the loss of
E-cadherin
, or abnormalities in
TP53
. The strongest biomarkers of poor prognosis are
p53
and
E-cadherin
, but even when both are abnormal 42% of node-negative patients are cured indicating that other determinative steps need to occur before successful metastases are established. Identification of these critical later events will further increase the efficacy of determining the malignant capacities of individual tumours.
...
PMID:Individual characterisation of the metastatic capacity of human breast carcinoma. 1095 49
beta-Catenin promotes epithelial architecture by forming cell surface complexes with
E-cadherin
and also interacts with TCF/LEF-1 in the nucleus to control gene expression. By DNA transfection, we overexpressed beta-catenin and/or LEF-1 in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts, corneal fibroblasts, corneal epithelia, uveal melanoma cells, and several carcinoma cell lines. In all cases (with or without LEF-1), the abundant exogenous beta-catenin localizes to the nucleus and forms distinct nuclear aggregates that are not associated with DNA. Surprisingly, we found that with time (5-8 d after transfection) cells overexpressing beta-catenin all undergo apoptosis. LEF-1 does not need to be present. Moreover, LEF-1 overexpression in the absence of exogenous beta-catenin does not induce apoptosis, even though some endogenous beta-catenin moves with the exogenous LEF-1 into the nucleus. TOPFLASH/FOPFLASH reporter assays showed that full-length beta-catenin is able to induce LEF-1-dependent transactivation, whereas Arm beta-catenin totally abolishes the transactivating function. However, Arm beta-catenin, containing deletions of known LEF-1-transactivating domains, has the same apoptotic effects as full-length beta-catenin. Overexpressed beta-catenin also induces apoptosis in cells transfected with nuclear localization signal-deleted LEF-1 that localizes only in the cytoplasm. Thus, the apoptotic effects of overexpressed exogenous beta-catenin do not rely on its transactivating function with nuclear LEF-1. Overexpressed delta-catenin, containing 10 Arm repeats, induces only minor apoptosis, suggesting that the major apoptotic effect may be due to domains specific to beta-catenin as well as to Arm repeats. The absence of
p53
, Rb, cyclin D1, or E2F1 does not affect the apoptotic effect of overexpressed beta-catenin, but Bcl-x(L) reduces it. We hypothesize that in vivo apoptosis of cells overexpressing beta-catenin might be a physiological mechanism to eliminate them from the population.
...
PMID:Overexpression of beta-catenin induces apoptosis independent of its transactivation function with LEF-1 or the involvement of major G1 cell cycle regulators. 1102 52
We investigated the role of endogenous AP-1 in human tumor cell lines by introducing SupJunD-1, a dominant-negative mutant of AP-1, using vesicular stomatitis virus G protein (VSV-G)-pseudotyped retrovirus vectors. Single inoculation of six human tumor cell lines, originating from osteosarcomas, non-small cell lung carcinomas or cervical carcinomas, with recombinant SupJunD-1 virus at a high multiplicity of infection readily inhibited colony formation in soft agar. We detected no significant changes in expression levels of AP-1 components c-Jun or Fra-1, adhesion molecules CD44 or
E-cadherin
, or cell cycle regulator
p53
, which are encoded by genes previously reported to be under the control of AP-1 in some mouse or human cell lines. By varying the dosage of VSV-G-pseudotyped retrovirus, we were able to change the proviral copy number of supjunD-1 from 1 to approximately 10 and monitor suppression of endogenous AP-1 function as assessed by growth characteristics of the tumor cell lines, we found a SupJunD-1 dosage which significantly suppressed anchorage-independent growth without affecting the cellular growth in monolayer cultures at all. We conclude that endogenous AP-1 levels necessary for oncogenic activity are much higher than those sufficient to support normal growth.
...
PMID:Endogenous AP-1 levels necessary for oncogenic activity are higher than those sufficient to support normal growth. 1107 61
The existence of genetic alterations affecting genes involved in cellular proliferation and death, such as
TP53
and K-ras, is one of the most common features of tumour cells. Recently, gene inactivation by promoter hypermethylation has been demonstrated. Methylation is the main epigenetic modification in mammals and abnormal methylation of the CpG islands located in the promoter region of the genes leads to transcriptional silencing. Examples include the p16INK4a, p15INK4B, p14ARF, Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL), the oestrogen and progesterone receptors,
E-cadherin
, death associated protein (DAP) kinase and the first tumour suppressor gene described, retinoblastoma (Rb) gene. In most cases, methylation involves loss of expression, absence of a coding mutation and restoration of transcription by the use of demethylating agents. However, is there a linkage between genetic and epigenetic alterations? Our results show one side of this puzzle demonstrating that epigenetic lesions drive genetic lesions in cancer. Four specific epigenetic lesions, promoter hypermethylation of the DNA mismatch repair gene hMLH1, the DNA alkyl-repair gene O(6)-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT), the detoxifier glutathione S-transferase P1 (GSTP1) and the familial breast cancer gene BRCA1 may lead to four specific genetic lesions, microsatellite instability, G to A transitions, steroid-related adducts and double-strand breaks in DNA. This is probably only the beginning of an extensive list of epigenetic events that change and make the genetic environment of the transformed cell unstable.
...
PMID:Epigenetic lesions causing genetic lesions in human cancer: promoter hypermethylation of DNA repair genes. 1109 2
Molecular characterization of eight gastric cancer cell lines established in Japan are summarized according to the genetic and epigenetic alterations and growth factor status. TMK-1 poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cell line harbors mutant p53 tumor suppressor gene and rearrangement of p15MTS2. MKN-1 adenosquamous carcinoma line with mutant p53 reveals silencing of
E-cadherin
by promoter CpG hypermethylation. MKN-7 well-differentiated adenocarcinoma cell line has amplification of c-erbB2 oncogene and cyclin E gene. MKN-28 well-differentiated adenocarcinoma cell line reveals mutations in
p53
and APC tumor suppressor genes and silencing of CD44. The MKN-45 poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cell line with wild-type
p53
is characterized by homozygous deletion of p16CDKN2/MTS1/INK4A and p15MTS2, amplification of c-met oncogene and promoter mutation of
E-cadherin
. MKN-74 derived from moderately differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma has wild-type
p53
. KATO-III signet ring cell carcinoma line has genomic deletion of
p53
, amplification of K-sam and c-met oncogene and mutation of
E-cadherin
. HSC-39 signet ring cell carcinoma cell line harboring
p53
missense mutation has homozygous deletion of p16CDKN2/MTS1/INK4A and p15MTS2, amplifications of c-myc, c-met, K-sam and CD44 gene and mutation in beta-catenin gene.
...
PMID:Molecular characteristics of eight gastric cancer cell lines established in Japan. 1110 48
No reliable pathologic criteria have been identified that predict clinical behavior in adrenal and extra-adrenal pheochromocytomas (PHEOs). Reliable prognostic markers for the prediction of clinical outcome are needed to assign optimal treatment for potentially malignant tumors. In this report, we evaluated several molecular markers (topoisomerase II alpha,
E-cadherin
, HER-2/neu, and retinoblastoma (RB) gene protein) that have not been previously studied in PHEOs. Paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissue blocks from 50 cases of PHEO (30 benign and 20 malignant, 31 adrenal and 19 extra-adrenal) were obtained from University of Utah Health Sciences Center, Salt Lake City, and the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Gross (tumor size, weight, local extension, cyst formation, hemorrhage, necrosis), microscopic (pleomorphism, hyaline globules, intranuclear inclusion, mitotic count, capsular and vascular invasion, ganglionic/neuronal differentiation), and immunohistochemical features (topoisomerase II alpha,
p53
, MIB-1,
E-cadherin
, RB, and HER-2/neu) were studied. With the exception of vascular invasion (P = 0.025), there were no unequivocal gross or microscopic characteristics that distinguished benign from malignant lesions (P approximately = 0.11-0.71). Topoisomerase III and MIB-1 indices in malignant lesions were significantly higher than those observed in benign lesions (P = 0.012 and 0.019). Differences in
p53
expression were not statistically significant (P = 0.082). Loss in RB protein product expression was significantly more common in malignant lesions (P = 0.001),
E-cadherin
loss and HER-2/-neu overexpression were not observed in any of the benign or malignant lesions. We studied the immunohistochemical expression of topoisomerase II alpha, MIB-1,
p53
, RB gene protein product,
E-cadherin
, and HER-2/neu in a series of adrenal and extra-adrenal PHEOs. Overexpression of topoisomerase II alpha and MIB-1 and loss of RB protein product were more common in malignant lesions, whereas
p53
,
E-cadherin
, and HER-2/neu do not seem to have diagnostic utility in the prediction of biologic behavior in these neoplasms.
...
PMID:Prognostic value of immunohistochemical expression of topoisomerase alpha II, MIB-1, p53, E-cadherin, retinoblastoma gene protein product, and HER-2/neu in adrenal and extra-adrenal pheochromocytomas. 1112 18
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