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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The linkage of herpes simplex virus (HSV) and human papillomavirus (HPV) to the development of oral cancer has been studied. In spite of the presence of viral nucleic acids in some human oral cancer specimens, HSV alone is not carcinogenic in animals: repeated viral inoculation to mouse or hamster oral mucosa fails to produce tumours or histopathological evidence of malignancy. However, HSV demonstrates co-carcinogenicity in vivo: viral inoculation significantly enhances the oncogenic capacity of chemical carcinogens in the oral cavity of mice and hamsters. Though the detailed mechanisms of HSV cocarcinogenicity are unknown, HSV promotes the chemical carcinogen-induced activation of certain cellular proto-oncogenes and inactivation of p53 tumour suppressor gene. Human papillomaviruses type 16 (HPV-16) and 18 (HPV-18) demonstrate oncogenicity by transforming normal human oral keratinocytes in vitro. While normal cells exhibit a limited life-span, cells transformed by these viruses show immortality and altered morphology in comparison with their normal counterparts. The HPV-immortalised cells contain multiple copies of intact viral genome integrated into cellular chromosomes. These cells also express several viral-specific mRNAs including viral E6/E7 mRNAs. Notably, these cells contain low levels of p53 protein and overexpressed cellular myc proto-oncogene compared to their normal counterpart; however, the immortilised cell lines are non-tumorigenic in nude mice.
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PMID:In vitro and animal studies of the role of viruses in oral carcinogenesis. 133 29

Here we analyzed the effect of the suppressor proto-oncogene p53 on transcription from the P2 promoter of the murine c-myc gene. c-myc promoter constructs were coupled to the chloramphenicol acetyl-transferase (CAT) gene and were transiently transfected into a human glial cell along with plasmids overexpressing wild-type or mutant p53. It was found that significant repression of c-myc transcription took place following cotransfection with wild-type but not mutant p53. However wild-type p53 did not suppress transcription from the SV40 early promoter or from the MHC promoter. Promoter-CAT constructs containing only the ME1a2 or E2F elements, from the P2 promoter, were repressed by p53, indicating that p53 may exert its effect at these two sites within the P2 promoter. Finally, when the SV40 T antigen and wild-type p53 were expressed together in glial cells the repressive effect of p53 was abolished.
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PMID:Wild-type murine p53 represses transcription from the murine c-myc promoter in a human glial cell line. 140 Jun 26

Friend virus induced erythroleukaemia can be conveniently divided into a first stage and a second stage. The first stage results from the mitogenic stimulation of EPO-R by gp55. In the second stage, multiple proviral integrations appear to result in further transformation of the SFFV infected erythroblast to a leukaemogenic state. The first stage results from EPO-R activation. After retroviral entry, mediated through an unknown receptor, and after cDNA synthesis and proviral integration, viral proteins are synthesized. Gp55 binds and activates EPO-R. A small but measurable amount of gp55-EPO-R complex is transported to the cell surface (Casadewall et al, 1991). In the presence of helper virus, the defective SFFV genome is packaged and released for subsequent rounds of infection. During the first stage, erythroblasts proliferate but are not tumorigenic. During the second stage of Friend disease, subsequent infections result in further proviral integrations in the host genome. Some of these integrations result in increased Spi-1 expression, whereas others result in decreased p53 expression. These events appear to account for the leukaemogenic properties of cells at this stage, 4-6 weeks after the initial SFFV infection. The interaction between EPO-R and gp55 persists at this later stage, although its contribution to the malignant phenotype of the MEL cells is not known. The sequence of events during stage 1 and stage 2 does not appear to have absolute requirements. Starting with IL-3 dependent immortalized Ba/F3 cells, which already have some unknown proliferative mutation (Mathey-Prevot et al, 1986), gp55 and EPO-R can subsequently be introduced, resulting in tumorigenicity (Li et al, 1990). The primary focus of this review has been the early mitogenic stage of Friend disease. Several concepts have emerged regarding the interaction between gp55 and EPO-R. The interaction between the polypeptides is highly specific, occurs in the extracytoplasmic regions and the transmembrane region of the polypeptides and occurs within the same cell, not via cell-cell contact. Both EPO and gp55 activate EPO-R, via different binding sites, resulting in increased cellular tyrosine kinase activity. The first stage of Friend disease is an example of how a non-oncogene bearing retrovirus can induce leukaemia. The env gene of the SFFV is not a classical oncogene. It does not appear to be derived from a normal cellular proto-oncogene. The interaction of gp55 and EPO-R therefore supports the "receptor mediated leukaemogenesis" hypothesis (McGrath and Weissman, 1978, 1979).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The interaction of the erythropoietin receptor and gp55. 145 Nov 11

The accumulation of genetic damage in the forms of activated proto-oncogenes and inactivated tumor-suppressor genes is the driving force in the evolution of a normal cell to a malignant cell. For example, both the activation of ras oncogenes and the inactivation of several suppressor genes, including p53, have been observed in the development of human colon and lung tumors. Point mutations in key codons can activate ras proto-oncogenes and inactivate the p53 suppressor gene. Thus, several critical genes for tumorigenesis are potential targets for carcinogens and radiation that can induce point mutations at low doses. The ras proto-oncogenes are targets for many genotoxic carcinogens. Activation of the ras gene is an early event--probably the "initiating" step--in the development of many chemical-induced rodent tumors. ras Oncogenes are observed in more human tumors and at a higher frequency than any other oncogene, and activation of the proto-oncogene may occur at various stages of the carcinogenic process. Numerous proto-oncogenes other than the ras genes have been shown to be activated in human tumors and to a lesser extent in rodent tumors. Mechanisms that induce aberrant expression of proto-oncogenes are gene amplification and chromosomal translocation or gene rearrangement. Amplification of proto-oncogenes and possibly gene overexpression during the absence of gene amplification occur in the development of many human tumors. For a specific tumor type, amplification of any one proto-oncogene may occur at a low frequency, but the frequency of tumors in which at least one proto-oncogene is amplified can be much higher. Proto-oncogene amplification is usually associated with late stages of tumor progression; however, amplified HER2/neu has been observed in early clinical stages of mammary neoplasia. Activation of proto-oncogenes by chromosomal translocation has been detected at a high frequency in several hematopoietic tumors. Non-ras genes have been detected by DNA transfection assays in both human and rodent tumors. For example, ret and trk genes were found to be activated by gene rearrangements in human papillary thyroid carcinomas. Several potentially new types of oncogenes have also been detected by DNA transfection assays. The etiology of the genetic alterations observed in most human tumors is unclear at present. Examples of ras gene activation and those documented for mutations in the p53 gene demonstrate that exogenous conditions can induce oncogenic mutants of normal genes. The genetic alterations observed in most human tumors are probably generated by both spontaneous events and exogenous conditions.
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PMID:Role of proto-oncogene activation in carcinogenesis. 148 40

We investigated the mechanism of radiation induction of murine thymic lymphomas by studying the characteristics of primary x-ray-induced thymic lymphoma (PXTL) cell lines and of their oncogene-induced, progressed progeny. It is widely thought that proto-oncogene alterations are associated with the induction of murine lymphomas; however, few, if any primary murine radiation-induced lymphomas possess (proto-)oncogene alterations. Independently derived cell lines grown directly (i.e., without in vivo transplantation) from thymic lymphomas of irradiated C57BL/6 mice possess the properties of immortalized pre-T cells and lack many of the characteristics of "tumor cells". PXTL cells are poorly tumorigenic upon transplantation, do not clone in methylcellulose cultures, are growth factor dependent and autocrine, and lack consistent chromosome and oncogene abnormalities. However, the thymic lymphomas are malignant and cause the death of each afflicted mouse. PXTL cells expressed two immunologically distinct forms of the tumor suppressor protein p53 that have moderately increased stability (t1/2 = 1 h) when compared with p53 of normal splenic T lymphocytes. Early PXTL cells could progress in vitro to a fully tumorigenic phenotype after infection with retroviruses encoding the c-myc and v-ras oncogenes. Progressed T-lymphoma cells acquired growth factor independence, a highly transplantable and tumorigenic phenotype, and the ability to quantitatively clone in methylcellulose cultures. Progressed lymphoma cells coordinately downregulated the expression of five T-cell differentiation markers, upregulated the expression of CD44 (Pgp-1), and harbored vastly elevated levels of two immunologically distinct forms of p53. Our results suggest that the early thymic lymphomas consist of differentiation-inhibited, immortal pre-T cells that are precursors to progressed, fully tumorigenic T-lymphoma cells.
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PMID:Association of induction of a fully tumorigenic phenotype in murine radiation-induced T-lymphoma cells with loss of differentiation antigens, gain of CD44, and alterations in p53 protein levels. 158 48

We describe a novel continuous B-cell line (PV-90) derived from a patient with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and originating from spontaneous infection with the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). The patient progressed to acute myeloblastic leukaemia (AML) 5 months after clinical onset of MDS. PV-90 is of clonal origin as indicated by the presence of immunoglobulin (Ig) gene rearrangements, monoclonal surface immunoglobulins, and a single DNA restriction fragment corresponding to the EBV genomic termini. PV-90 cells also express a number of myelomonocytic markers, including alpha-naphthyl acetate esterase (ANAE), coagulation factor XIII, and CD68 antigen. Moreover, PV-90 cells constitutively express the c-fms proto-oncogene mRNA as the patient's blast cells did. Whereas a trisomy 11 (+11) was found in the patient's bone marrow cells, PV-90 cells had a normal karyotype initially, but at 4 months showed two different and independent chromosomal abnormalities: 90, XX, -Y, -Y, t(9;16) (q11;p13), and 90, XX, -Y, -Y, t(17;18) (p13;q21), the latter possibly involving the p53 (17,p13) and bcl-2 (18, q21) proto-oncogenes. The early development of these chromosomal aberrations is consistent with a genetic instability of PV-90 cells. Expression of bi-lineage markers and genetic instability may suggest that PV-90 cells originated from transformation of a myelodysplastic progenitor cell capable of both myeloid and B-cell differentiation. The PV-90 cell line might be useful in a number of studies, including the possible role of c-fms in cell differentiation, pathogenetic mechanisms of human preleukaemia and lineage promiscuity in acute leukaemia.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of a B-cell line derived from a patient with a myelodysplastic syndrome which expresses myelomonocytic and lymphoid markers. 164 72

We show using mild extraction procedures that the p53 proto-oncogene forms a complex with adenovirus 5 E1b-58 kD during infection. These complexes are detected as coimmunoprecipitates from radiolabeled extracts of adenovirus infected cells on SDS-PAGE. Furthermore, adenovirus mutants with defects in E1b-58 kD fail to form complexes, whereas mutants in other early region genes still show evidence of complex. Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies to mouse p53, we show that antibodies reacting with N-terminal epitopes on p53, displace E1b-58 kD. This result suggests that E1b-58 kD binds to an N-terminal region of mouse p53. In addition, in a transient transfection assay in monkey COS cells, we show that an N-terminal deletion mutant of mouse p53 does not bind to E1b-58 kD but wild-type mouse p53 does bind. This result again suggests that E1b-58 kD binds an N-terminal determinant on p53.
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PMID:Adenovirus E1b-58 kD antigen binds to p53 during infection of rodent cells: evidence for an N-terminal binding site on p53. 182 73

Studies of multistage carcinogenesis in mouse skin have provided many of the early concepts of tumour initiation, promotion and progression. Genetic approaches have led to the identification of a number of mutational alterations in proto-oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes which take place at specific stages of carcinogenesis in this particular system. Initiation involves, at least in a proportion of tumours, mutational activation of the cellular H-ras proto-oncogene. Trisomy of chromosome 7, which develops during the premalignant clonal expansion phase, possibly as a consequence of tumour promoter treatment, is followed by further alterations on chromosome 7 which lead to a relative increase in the expression of mutant ras alleles. The p53 tumour suppressor gene undergoes mutational alteration and loss of heterozygosity in a proportion of squamous carcinomas but this particular gene does not appear to be involved in the further transition of squamous carcinomas to highly undifferentiated spindle cell tumours. The latter transition appears to be a recessive event which can be complemented by fusion with cells at earlier stages of malignancy. Mouse skin carcinogenesis therefore continues to provide invaluable information on the nature of the genetic and biological transitions which occur during the step-wise progression of normal cells to malignancy.
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PMID:Functional loss of tumour suppressor genes in multistage chemical carcinogenesis. 184 54

Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is the best understood human cancer. The molecular basis of CML involves activation of a cellular proto-oncogene--ABL. The consequence is to increase tyrosine kinase activity. This results in a marked clonal increase in the myeloid mass. Later on, cellular maturation is blocked and the decrease eventuates in acute leukemia. Abnormalities of other proto-oncogenes or antioncogenes, like P53, may be involved in leukemia progression. Treatment of CML involves chemotherapy and, more recently, interferon. Whether this treatment prolongs survival or increases the likelihood of cure is unknown but either result seems unlikely. Bone marrow transplants which cure about 50% of persons with CML are most effective when performed in chronic phase.
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PMID:Chronic myelogenous leukemia: molecule to man. 189 3

There are abnormalities in the structure and/or function of several oncogenes and growth factors in human pancreatic cancer, notably the EGF receptor and its ligand TGF alpha, c-erb B-2 proto-oncogene, Ki-ras oncogene and the tumour suppressor gene p53. The temporal sequence of their activation and the nature of the aetiological agents responsible for their activation are not yet clear. In vitro pancreatic culture systems and transgenic animal experiments are needed to reconstruct and define those molecular events that are necessary and sufficient for the neoplastic phenotype.
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PMID:Growth factors and oncogenes in pancreatic cancer. 196 2


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