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 ability of
p53 protein
to activate transcription is central to its tumor-suppressor function. We describe a genetic selection in Saccharomyces cerevisiae which was used to isolate a mutant strain defective in
p53
-mediated transcriptional activation. The defect was partially corrected by overexpression of a yeast gene named PAK1 (
p53
activating kinase), which localizes to the left arm of chromosome IX. PAK1 is predicted to encode an 810-aa protein with regions of strong similarity to previously described Ser/
Thr
-specific protein kinases. PAK1 sequences upstream of the coding region are characteristic of those regulating genes involved in cell cycle control. Expression of PAK1 was associated with an increased specific activity of
p53
in DNA-binding assays accompanied by a corresponding increase in transactivation. Thus, PAK1 is the prototype for a class of genes that can regulate the activity of
p53
in vivo, and the system described here should be useful in identifying other genes in this class.
...
PMID:PAK1, a gene that can regulate p53 activity in yeast. 759 81
Mutations in the
TP53
tumor suppressor gene have been studied in different types of brain tumors. Little is known about this genetic event in human meningioma, a mostly benign tumor. To investigate the frequency of
TP53
gene mutations in human tumors derived from meningeal tissues, paraffin-embedded tissues from 30 cases (including 2 malignant and 4 atypical meningiomas, as well as 2 hemangioblastomas and 3 hemangiopericytomas) were screened by immunohistochemistry. Polymerase chain reaction/single strand conformational polymorphism (PCR/SSCP) and direct DNA sequencing were thereafter performed in selected cases. Nuclear
p53
staining was not seen in any of the 19 benign meningiomas tested, while atypical meningiomas, hemangioblastomas, and hemangiopericytomas displayed nuclear staining in a subpopulation of tumor cells in 4 out of 5, 2 out of 2, and 3 out of 3 cases, respectively. One malignant meningioma showed an intense nuclear staining and a band shift in SSCP. In this case, we identified a mutation in the
TP53
gene at codon 161 changing GCC to ACC and resulting in an alteration of alanine to
threonine
in this position. Our results indicate that
TP53
gene mutation may be considered as a marker for malignant transformation in meningioma.
p53
immunoreactivity, even in the absence of detectable gene mutation, is also associated with atypia and does not appear in regular benign meningiomas.
...
PMID:Detection of TP53 gene mutation in human meningiomas: a study using immunohistochemistry, polymerase chain reaction/single-strand conformation polymorphism and DNA sequencing techniques on paraffin-embedded samples. 765 83
UVB irradiation inhibits melanocyte proliferation by causing arrest in G1 (D. Barker, K. Dixon, E. E. Medrano, D. Smalara, S. Im, D. Mitchell, G. Babcock, and Z. A. Abdel-Malek. Cancer Res., 55: 4041-4046, 1995). To determine how, after UVB irradiation, signal transduction pathways, DNA damage, and cell cycle arrest interact in the human melanocyte, we analyzed here the possible activation of tyrosine kinases, the serine-
threonine
kinases Baf-1 and ERK2, the status of the transcription factor c-fos, and the activation of cell cycle checkpoints induced by expression of
p53 protein
. We found that in contrast to the UVC response, exposure to UVB irradiation did not stimulate the above kinases. UVB light induced a prolonged c-fos expression, suggesting a mechanism of induction different from the transient expression elicited by growth factors. The
tumor suppressor p53
and the
p53
-inducible cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor protein p21Waf-1/SDI-1/Cip-1 were expressed at high levels for at least 2 days after UV-irradiation. In parallel, phosphorylation of Rb, the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor gene product, was halted in UVB-irradiated cells and correlated with the expression of the protein p21Waf-1/SDI-1/Cip-1. Our data define for the first time how UVB irradiation affects the expression of crucial regulatory events needed for cell cycle progression in the human melanocyte.
...
PMID:Ultraviolet B light induces G1 arrest in human melanocytes by prolonged inhibition of retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation associated with long-term expression of the p21Waf-1/SDI-1/Cip-1 protein. 766 78
The reversibility of a differentiation program termed dedifferentiation, redifferentiation, or retrodifferentiation opens a spectrum of new possibilities for cellular development. During differentiation and retrodifferentiation, the expression of gene products associated with a differentiated phenotype and cell cycle regulation demonstrate inverse patterns. This effect requires a coordinated network that simultaneously controls cell growth and differentiation. In particular, crosstalk between induction of differentiation and G0/G1 cell cycle exit can be initiated and sustained by activated serine/
threonine
kinases and tyrosine kinases. Phosphorylation signals are relayed to certain genes or transcription factors such as Fos/Jun, EGR-1, NF-kappa B, MyoD, or the Myc/Max gene family. However, the precise regulation of these transcription factors to confer signals to differentiation-associated and cell cycle-regulatory genes remains unclear. Cell cycle exit into a transient G0'-arrest cycle or a terminal G0 phase is determined by a network of phosphorylation signals involving the retinoblastoma protein and a variety of factors such as the E2F family, cyclins, and cyclin-dependent kinases. In this context, a variety of differentiation-induced cell lines, including monocytic, neuronal, or muscle cells, can progress through the G0'-arrest cycle, whereby a certain population retains the capacity to retrodifferentiate and reenter the cell cycle. In contrast, the rest of the differentiated population enters the irreversible G0 phase (terminal commitment) that finally results in programmed cell death. The expression of growth arrest-specific (gas and gadd) genes is associated with the G0'-arrest cycle, and other factors, including c-myc,
p53
, mdm2, and bcl2/bclx, contribute to the regulation of the cell death program. Although the precise signaling cascade determining retrodifferentiation or cell death remains unclear, a coordinated inter- and intracellular regulation could establish a certain biological balance between these exclusive pathways. Consequently, a retrodifferentiation process may provide a potential for cell type conversion or transdifferentiation, whereby retrodifferentiated cells can be induced to develop via a different pathway according to tissue-specific requirements.
...
PMID:Retrodifferentiation and cell death. 771 Nov 13
Unlike most Ser/
Thr
protein kinases which recognize phosphoacceptor sites specified by basic residues, protein kinase CK2 is extraordinarily acidophilic in nature. By combining the analysis of more than 100 CK2 natural phosphorylation sites with the kinetic behaviour of a large number of model peptide substrates, it can be concluded that although the most crucial specificity determinant is an acidic residue (Glu, Asp, TyrP, or SerP) at position +3, additional acidic residues at positions spanning from -2 to +7 (and probably farther) also act as positive specificity determinants for CK2, whereas basic residues at these positions, prolyl residue at position +1, and a bulky hydrophobic doublet at position +1 and +2, are powerful negative determinants. It also appears that the nature of the acidic determinants may variably influence their effect depending on the position occupied: Thus, multiple aspartic acids are, in general, determinants as good as, or even better, than an equivalent number of glutamic acids; an individual Asp at position +3 flanked by Glu residues is ineffective; and phosphorylated residues appear to be much more effective if adjacent to the target residue (positions -2 to +2). In some instances, the local determinants alone are insufficient to account for the phosphorylation efficiency of the substrate which is greatly improved by the overall protein conformation, as illustrated by the examples of CK2 beta-subunit and
protein p53
, the latter exhibiting no consensus sequence around its phosphorylation site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of protein kinase CK2. 773 14
p53
expression was studied immunohistochemically to identify a precursor lesion of basal cell carcinoma (BCC) in the epidermis adjacent to BCC. With two different anti-
p53
antibodies of CM1 and DO7,
p53
expression was frequently detected in the epidermis adjacent to BCCs arising on the face and in the normal epidermis with usual sun exposure. In the epidermis adjacent to BCC, stained cells were occasionally clustered in a small area, but no cluster was found in the normal epidermis with usual sun exposure. The expression was less frequent in the normal epidermis with rare sun exposure. Ten cases of normal skin with usual sun exposure, showing CM1 staining in the epidermis, were screened for
p53
gene mutations with polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis using DNAs obtained from the epidermis. No mutation was detected in exons 2 to 10 of the
p53
gene in these 10 cases. The epidermis flanking three BCCs that was stained with CM1, on the other hand, carried a missense mutation of C to G transversion at a dipyrimidine site of codon 249. This alteration replaced arginine with
threonine
. The mutation of codon 249 was not detected in the three BCCs. Our results first suggest that ultraviolet light irradiating the skin in a daily life induces
p53
accumulation in the epidermis and secondly that the frequent clonal expansion of
p53
mutant cells occurs in the epidermis adjacent to BCCs. This clonal expansion of mutant p53 may provide a molecular basis for high risk of developing subsequent new skin cancers in patients with BCC.
...
PMID:Frequent p53 accumulation in the chronically sun-exposed epidermis and clonal expansion of p53 mutant cells in the epidermis adjacent to basal cell carcinoma. 776 52
The 72-kDa spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) and Src-family kinase
p53
/56Lyn (Lyn) contribute to signaling via the B-cell antigen receptor complex. Here we show that Syk and Lyn from human B lymphocytes can interact directly. Syk and Lyn coimmunoprecipitated from mature and activated B-cell lines, and gel-purified Syk and Lyn reassociated in vitro, demonstrating their direct interaction. This Syk-Lyn interaction may be dependent on the stage of B-cell differentiation, since Syk-Lyn associations were not detected in pre-B and myeloma cell lines and Syk from an immature B-cell line did not reassociate with Lyn in vitro. Serine/
threonine
kinase activity was also associated with Syk. Crosslinking of cell surface IgM led to rapid activation of both tyrosine and serine/threonine protein kinase activities that resulted in phosphorylation in vitro of proteins coprecipitating with Syk--in particular, a serine/
threonine
phosphorylated protein 120 kDa in size (pp120). Several phosphoproteins, including one of 72 kDa and one of 120 kDa, coprecipitated with phospholipase C-gamma 1 (PLC gamma 1). Sequential immunoprecipitation identified the 72-kDa protein associated with PLC gamma 1 as Syk. The 120-kDa serine/
threonine
phosphorylated protein that coprecipitated with PLC gamma 1 resembled the Syk-associated pp120 by several criteria. Thus, pp120 may serve as a link between Syk and PLC gamma 1, coupling the B-cell antigen receptor to the phosphatidylinositol pathway.
...
PMID:Human spleen tyrosine kinase p72Syk associates with the Src-family kinase p53/56Lyn and a 120-kDa phosphoprotein. 783 Dec 90
WAF1/CIP1, a gene up-regulated by
p53
encodes an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases. Induction of WAF1/CIP1 in cells with intact
p53
is believed to be instrumental in cell cycle arrest and apoptosis caused by DNA damage. In a model system, WAF1/CIP1 has been shown to have tumor suppressive activity. It is not known however whether WAF1/CIP1 is mutated in human primary tumors. Cells from colorectal cancer have been shown to acquire a series of genetic alterations, including frequent
p53
mutations. Thus colorectal tumors, particularly those without identified
p53
mutations, are good candidate to search for putative WAF1/CIP1 mutations. DNA extracted from 45 tumors, (including 28 tumors for which
p53
mutations had previously been searched for and not found) were PCR amplified for exon 2 of WAF1/CIP1. A search for point mutations was performed in each amplified product using a denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) technique which enables the efficient screening of codons 9 to 139 (i.e. 80% of the WAF1/CIP1 coding sequence). Two different DNA variants were identified and shown to be present in constitutional DNAs of the corresponding patients. The first variant, a C to A transversion at codon 31, changes a serine for an arginine and was detected in eight tumors (18% of the cases). The second variant, detected in a single case (2%) is a silent A to T transversion at the third base of codon 91. DNA extracted from 70 unrelated members from the Centre d'Etude du Polymorphisme Humain (CEPH) was screened for these polymorphisms. The ser/arg polymorphism of codon 31 was detected in seven cases (10%) thus suggesting that it is not associated with a marked colorectal cancer predisposition. The polymorphism on codon 91 was not detected. Two additional variants (arginine to histidine at position 67 and
threonine
to methionine at position 80) were observed once each in the CEPH family members. Somatic mutation of the WAF1/CIP1 gene was not observed, indicating that, unless there are hot spots for mutations outside the screened region, this gene is not a frequent site of point mutation in colorectal cancer.
...
PMID:Polymorphisms and probable lack of mutation in the WAF1-CIP1 gene in colorectal cancer. 784 85
Recent studies have shown that inactivation of
tumor suppressor p53
gene is a key point in the development of human carcinomas and that normal
p53 protein
acts as a "molecular policeman" monitoring the integrity of the genome. In the present study, a series of 22 primary human salivary gland carcinomas were examined for alterations and expression of the
p53
gene by a combined molecular and immunohistochemical approach, polymerase chain reaction single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP), direct gene sequencing and
p53 protein
immunostaining. In addition, in order to identify correlations between
p53
abnormalities and genetic instability, DNA aneuploidy and tumor growth characteristics were analyzed by cytofluorometry and the AgNOR technique. Seven of the 22 cases displayed nuclear
p53
overexpression as revealed by immunostaining with
p53
monoclonal antibody (Do-7), and 2 of these 7 cases were associated with the presence of point mutations [codon 140: ACC (
Thr
)-->ATC (Ile), codon 175: CGC (Arg)-->CAC (His)] of the
p53
gene. Twelve of the 22 cases were aneuploid on the DNA histogram, and this phenomenon was statistically correlated with the 7 cases exhibiting
p53
nuclear accumulation. AgNOR staining, on the other hand, was not statistically correlated with
p53
abnormalities. These findings support the view that abnormal nuclear accumulation of the
p53 protein
is correlated with genetic instability of human salivary gland carcinoma cells.
...
PMID:[p53 abnormality in salivary gland carcinoma and its relation to tumor DNA aneuploidy and AgNOR]. 786
Our previous study revealed that mutations of the
p53
gene were detected by cDNA sequencing in one of four (25%) primary gastric tumors and in five of six (83%) gastric cancer cell lines. It was of interest that all five cell lines established from metastatic lesions had
p53
gene mutations, while the single cell line established from a primary tumor lacked an abnormality. Thus, the current study was initiated to determine the frequency of
p53
mutations in 10 pairs of samples from primary gastric carcinomas and their lymph node metastases, in addition to morphologically normal gastric mucosa. In addition, we correlated the findings with other relevant molecular markers including the metastasis associated nm23-H1 gene and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) using multiple polymorphic markers for chromosome 17p and sequencing the entire open reading frame (ORF) of the
p53
gene. Five of ten (50%) patients were constitutionally heterozygous for one or more 17p and/or
p53
probes (pYNZ 22, BamHI RFLP; pMct35.1, Mspl RFLP; php53cl, Bg/II RFLP), while none had LOH at the 17p and/or
p53
. A Bg/II RFLP for analysis of possible nm23-H1 somatic allelic deletion revealed no LOH out of four informative cases. One paired sample demonstrated the substitution of valine for isoleucine at codon 41 (GTT to ATT) in both primary gastric tumor and metastasis. Another metastatic sample demonstrated the substitution of proline for
threonine
at codon 278 (CCT to C/ACT) in addition to a non-mutated codon, while only the wild-type
p53
sequence was present in the paired primary gastric tumor tissue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Comparison of p53 gene mutations in paired primary and metastatic gastric tumor tissues. 790 5
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>