Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A patient with bilateral retinoblastoma and subsequent multiple primary osteosarcomas has been described previously. Osteosarcoma cell lines established from this patient were shown to express a shortened RB1 mRNA transcript and no detectable normal Rb protein. We now show that the osteosarcoma cell lines have lost one TP53 allele and contain a mutation in exon 8 codon 286 [GAA to AAA (Glu to Lys)] in the remaining allele. Consequently, the osteosarcoma cell lines have no normal Rb protein and no normal p53 protein. Neither constitutional DNA nor DNA extracted from a retinoblastoma of the left eye of the patient contained the TP53 mutation, suggesting that the TP53 mutation in the osteosarcoma cells may represent a tumor-promoting mutation, which confers a selective growth advantage. If both RB1 and TP53 are involved in the initiation of osteosarcoma, the mechanisms for development of the retinoblastoma and osteosarcoma tumors are different.
...
PMID:A TP53 mutation detected in cells established from an osteosarcoma, but not in the retinoblastoma of a patient with bilateral retinoblastoma and multiple primary osteosarcomas. 133 9

Multifocal osteogenic sarcoma patients without familial histories of increased tumor predisposition were examined for mutations in the highly conserved regions of the p53 gene. p53 point mutations were found in tumor DNA from each of the four patients we examined. A germ-line p53 mutation was detected in one of these patients, and a further rearrangement of the residual wild-type allele was detected in tumor tissue. p53 germ-line mutations can contribute to the enhanced predisposition to tumor development manifest in patients with multifocal osteosarcoma.
...
PMID:Germ-line and somatic p53 gene mutations in multifocal osteogenic sarcoma. 134 75

A malignant stromal tumor of the testis with an osteosarcoma component and five of its metastases mainly containing osteosarcoma have been analyzed for RB1 and TP53 abnormalities. Whereas in the primary tumor and in some of the metastases loss of heterozygosity could not be detected for RB1 or for the 17p13 region in which TP53 is located, other metastases showed such losses of heterozygosity. By polymerase chain reaction analysis an 18-base pair deletion from exon 5 of the TP53 gene was found in a small proportion of primary tumor cells and in one of the metastases, but not in the other metastases. Therefore, in this case neither RB1 nor TP53 seems to play an essential role in the initiation of osteosarcoma.
...
PMID:Analysis of a metastasizing testicular mixed gonadal stromal tumor with osteosarcoma components suggests that a malignant tumor with the histology of osteosarcoma may develop without primary involvement of RB1 and TP53. 142 18

We studied the pedigrees of 17 index patients with osteosarcoma, recording malignant disease and cause of death for first- and second-degree relatives. There were seven cancers and five cancer deaths per 2151.5 person-years in first-degree relatives of osteosarcoma patients under the age of 50 years, a significantly greater incidence than in an age- and sex-matched population group (p < 0.001). This excess of malignancy was largely due to two families which fulfilled the criteria for the Li-Fraumeni cancer family syndrome. Both of these families were shown to have the genetic alterations in the p53 gene which have been implicated in this syndrome. Our study suggests that orthopaedic surgeons seeing new cases of osteosarcoma should arrange screening for familial malignancy.
...
PMID:A significant proportion of patients with osteosarcoma may belong to Li-Fraumeni cancer families. 144 51

We analyzed 14 native osteosarcoma tissue samples for alterations of the tumor suppressor genes RB1 and p53 on the DNA level, and as far as possible, the RNA level. Southern blot analyses concerning both tumor suppressor genes were carried out in all osteosarcomas. In two cases we could demonstrate a deletion within the RB1 gene. DNA analysis of a third osteosarcoma patient revealed a rearrangement of the p53 gene. We had the opportunity of performing corresponding northern analyses in eight native osteosarcoma specimens. The RB1 gene expression was significantly decreased or completely absent in six tumor samples. In two of these tissue probes the expression of both tumor suppressor genes was missing. We determined coexistence of decreased expression of both tumor suppressor genes in one additional case. In summary, 7/14 or 6/8 cases of osteosarcomas (including only those cases which allowed both analyses) showed RB1 gene alteration. In 3/14 or 3/8 osteosarcomas we could determine p53 gene abnormalities. This may indicate that either loss of p53 function is etiologically important only for the development of some osteosarcomas, or a major part of p53 gene mutations are subtle ones and their detection requires more sophisticated techniques, which are currently under development.
...
PMID:Studies of the RB1 gene and the p53 gene in human osteosarcomas. 152 85

We have investigated the involvement of tumor suppressor genes in the genesis of osteosarcoma by analyzing allele losses at polymorphic loci in tumor tissues. Genotypes of DNA from primary osteosarcoma tissue and corresponding normal cells from 37 patients were analyzed at 58 polymorphic loci representing each autosomal chromosome arm except 5p and 20q. Allele losses were found at polymorphic loci on 36 of 37 chromosome arms analyzed. In particular, four of them showed frequencies of allele loss higher than 60%: 3q (75%); 13q (68%); 17p (72%); and 18q (64%). This result suggests that, in addition to the RB (retinoblastoma) gene on 13q and the p53 gene on 17p, at least two more tumor suppressor genes located on 3q and 18q are frequently involved in the development of osteosarcoma. The extent of allele losses as defined by fractional allelic loss among 36 tumors was diverse, from 0 to 0.64. The median fractional allelic loss value of 0.32 was much higher than those previously reported in colorectal carcinoma and breast carcinoma. Although no definite association of fractional allelic loss value to clinical prognosis of each case was found in osteosarcoma, tumors with 17p loss were more prone to the early onset of lung metastasis than tumors without 17p loss, indicating that allele loss on chromosome 17p can be a useful measure of prognosis.
...
PMID:Allelotype analysis in osteosarcomas: frequent allele loss on 3q, 13q, 17p, and 18q. 156 11

Osteosarcoma tumorigenesis is consistent with a model by which tumorigenesis results if both alleles at the retinoblastoma susceptibility locus (RBI) are altered. Additional genetic evidence strongly suggests that another obligate event in osteosarcoma tumorigenesis is the homozygous alteration of another gene, p53. Both the RB1 gene and p53 have been proposed to act as tumor-suppressor genes, suggesting that, in this instance, tumorigenesis is the result of the loss of gene function of these two genes, rather than a gain of function.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic considerations in osteosarcoma. 167 82

We examined structure and expression of the p53 and Rb genes in a C3HOS transplantable mouse model of osteosarcoma. The results were compared to analogous studies conducted with five human osteosarcoma cell lines. The p53 gene was found rearranged in the mouse tumour. The rearrangement mapped to the first intron region of the p53 gene and as a result, no p53 expression could be detected in C3HOS tumours. Using p53 genomic probes, we have detected the same rearrangement in the original radiation-induced tumour and the various clones that were isolated from it. Deletion and rearrangement of the p53 gene were also found in three out of five of the human osteosarcoma cell lines (MG-63, G-292, Saos-2). No p53 expression could be detected in these three cell lines. In the affected human osteosarcoma cell lines, the rearrangement involved the first intron region. In addition, the mouse tumor was analysed for structural and expression changes in the Rb and the c-myc genes. Normal expression of both genes were detected in the murine tumour. Only one (Saos-2) human osteosarcoma cell line exhibited gross structural alteration in the retinoblastoma gene. The results suggest that the inactivation of p53 may be an important step in the development of osteosarcomas, and that a rearrangement affecting the first intron is common in osteosarcomas.
...
PMID:Inactivation of p53 gene in human and murine osteosarcoma cells. 173 19

Inactivation of two tumor suppressor genes, RB and p53, is associated with tumor formation. To elucidate the molecular basis of the tumorigenesis of human osteosarcoma, structural and expressional alterations of these two genes were examined in five human osteosarcoma cell lines, two of which were from Japanese patients. In addition, I analyzed two adenovirus E1A-binding proteins, p107 and p300, putative "tumor suppressor gene products", which share similar properties with the RB protein in binding to the E1A oncoprotein. Detailed analyses of DNA, mRNA, and protein showed that (1) 3 lines including both Japanese lines lost the expression of the RB protein due to either the absence or the alteration of mRNA caused by DNA rearrangement, (2) abnormality of p53 gene was detected in all cell lines : 4 lines lost p53 expression due to either gene loss or the absence of mRNA, and one line expressed an abnormal form of the protein without detectable DNA and mRNA alterations and (3) no significant alteration of p107 or p300 was detected in all cell lines. These results further confirm that inactivating mutations of p53 and RB genes are deeply involved in the carcinogenesis of human osteosarcoma and suggest that p107 and p300 may not play a role in the tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:[Roles of tumor suppressor genes in human osteosarcoma cells]. 182 50

The p53 gene has been found to be mutated in many different kinds of human cancers. In a previous study, expression of exogenous wild-type p53 in human osteosarcoma cells by retrovirus-mediated gene transfer resulted in marked enlargement of cell size, reduced growth rate in culture and loss of tumorigenicity in nude mice. Here we examine the effects of expression of wild-type or mutated p53 on human peripheral neuroepithelioma (PNET) A673 cells; these cells contained apparently normal alleles of the p53 gene but did not express a detectable quantity of p53 protein. Various characteristics of the p53-expressing cells were examined including morphology, growth rate, soft-agar colony formation, and tumorigenicity in nude mice. In contrast to osteosarcoma Saos-2 cells, expression of wild-type or mutant p53 protein in A673 cells had no effect on morphology or growth characteristics. However, clones expressing wild-type p53 protein had reduced ability to form colonies in soft agar and tumors in nude mice. To substantiate the genotype of wild-type p53-expressing cells, the proviral p53-encoding DNA of one cell clone was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction and sequenced. We concluded that expression of a single allele of the wild-type p53 gene was sufficient to suppress PNET A673 tumorigenicity but had no detectable effect on growth rate in culture.
...
PMID:Expression of wild-type p53 in human A673 cells suppresses tumorigenicity but not growth rate. 192 5


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>