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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The carcinogenic and metastatic processes are thought to consist of a sequence of steps, and animal models featuring highly metastatic lesions are clearly necessary to allow analysis of the whole process of transformation from preneoplastic changes to high grade metastatic tumors, and to access effectiveness of therapeutic treatments of advanced cancers in vivo. The purpose of the present study was to establish a model and to screen for reported genetic alterations in induced lesions. In the present study, it was confirmed that lung metastasis of hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) induced in male F344 rats by N-nitrosomorpholine (NNM), given in the drinking water at a dose of 120 ppm for 24 weeks, was significantly enhanced by additional carcinogenic pretreatments and that a single i.p. injection of 100 mg/kg body weight N-diethylnitrosamine (DEN) alone was sufficient for that purpose. Molecular biological analyses of the induced lesions revealed point mutations in the
p53
gene in 60.9% of HCCs, and elevated expression of mRNAs for
p53
, c-myc, c-fos, TGF-alpha, TGF-beta1, alpha-fetoprotein, GST-P, and GGT, and decreased mRNA expression of EGF and
EGFR
in HCCs when compared to controls. No obvious association of gene alterations with metastatic potential of primary tumors was found except for an increase in the incidence of
p53
mutations. Since the process of metastasis is thought to be sequential and selective, further comparative analysis of metastatic and primary lesions should clarify the mechanisms involved in the multi-step process of metastasis.
...
PMID:Highly metastatic hepatocellular carcinomas induced in male F344 rats treated with N-nitrosomorpholine in combination with other hepatocarcinogens show a high incidence of p53 gene mutations along with altered mRNA expression of tumor-related genes. 902 67
The recent highlighted points in prognostic factors after breast cancer operation include: 1) the emergence of many genetic and biochemical markers, including c-erbB-2, int-2,
EGFR
,
p53
, nm23, LOH, E cadherin, s-phase fraction. The prognostic value of these factors is related to their role in cell cycle regulation, invasion/metastasis mechanisms, etc. The agents related to therapeutic effectiveness, namely p-glycoprotein, pS2, and bcl-2 may become important stratification factors when conducting clinical trials. Pathologic factors, like nodal status, however, are the most useful prognostic factors at the moment. Many newly developed prognostic factors should be examined by multivariate analysis and validated prospectively before clinical use.
...
PMID:[Recent prognostic factors for breast cancer]. 912 98
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) can be divided into genetic subsets: approximately one-third of GBM, primarily in older adults, have
EGFR
amplification; another one-third, primarily in younger adults, have
TP53
mutation. The majority of GBM also have homozygous deletions of the CDKN2 (p16/MTS1) gene, resulting in cell cycle deregulation and elevated proliferation indices. We evaluated the relationship between CDKN2 deletions and the GBM subsets as defined by
EGFR
amplification or
TP53
mutation in 70 GBM. Twenty-eight cases (40%) had
EGFR
amplification, 21 (30%) had
TP53
mutation, and 21 (30%) had neither change. CDKN2 deletions were present in 36 (51%) GBM. Of the 28 GBM with
EGFR
amplification, 20 (71%) had CDKN2 deletion (p = 0.0078). The remaining 16 cases with CDKN2 loss were divided between GBM with
TP53
mutations (6 cases) and GBM with neither
EGFR
amplification nor
TP53
mutation (10 cases). Thus, CDKN2 deletions occur twice as commonly in GBM with
EGFR
amplification (71%) than in GBM with
TP53
mutation (29%). CDKN2 deletions occurred in GBM from patients somewhat older than those patients with GBM lacking CDKN2 deletion (mean age 53 vs. 48 years). Specifically among GBM with
EGFR
amplification, those with CDKN2 deletions also occurred in patients slightly older than those few GBM without CDKN2 deletions (mean age 55 vs. 51 years). The presence of CDKN2 deletions in most GBM with
EGFR
amplification and in generally older patients may provide one explanation for the potentially more aggressive nature of such tumors.
...
PMID:Association of EGFR gene amplification and CDKN2 (p16/MTS1) gene deletion in glioblastoma multiforme. 921 72
Glioblastomas (GBMs) are a heterogeneous group of tumors. Recently, distinct molecular genetic alterations have been linked to subgroups of patients with GBM. Giant cell (gc)GBMs are a rare variant of GBM characterized by a marked preponderance of multinucleated giant cells. Several reports have associated this entity with a more favorable prognosis than the majority of GBMs. To evaluate whether gcGBM may also represent a genetically defined subgroup of GBM, we analyzed a series of 19 gcGBMs for mutations in the
TP53
gene for amplification of the
EGFR
and CDK4 genes and for homozygous deletions in the CDKN2A (p16/MTS1) gene. Seventeen of nineteen gcGBMs carried
TP53
mutations whereas
EGFR
and CDK4 gene amplification was seen in only one tumor each and homozygous deletion of CDKN2A was not observed at all. The strikingly high incidence of
TP53
mutations and the relative absence of other genetic alterations groups gcGBM together with a previously recognized molecular genetic variant of GBM (type 1 GBM). It is tempting to speculate that the better prognosis of gcGBM patients may result from the low incidence of
EGFR
amplification and CDKN2A deletion, changes known for their growth-promoting potential.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic analysis of giant cell glioblastomas. 928 34
Primary glioblastomas develop rapidly de novo through a genetic pathway characterized by amplification/overexpression of
EGFR
and of MDM2 genes. Secondary glioblastomas develop more slowly through progression from low grade or anaplastic astrocytoma and show a high incidence of a
p53
mutation. In the present study, primary and secondary glioblastomas were analyzed for p16 deletions and CDK4 amplification by differential PCR and for loss of expression of the retinoblastoma (RB) gene by immunohistochemistry. Except for one case, alterations in the structure or expression of p16, CDK4 and RB were mutually exclusive. The overall incidence of aberrant expression of these genes coding for components of the cell-cycling-regulatory system was similar in primary (14/28; 50%) and secondary glioblastomas (9/23; 39%). However, p16 deletions were significantly more frequent in the former (10/28; 36%) than in the latter (1/23, 4%; P = 0.0075), suggesting that this alteration constitutes an additional genetic hallmark of the primary (de novo) glioblastoma.
...
PMID:Alterations of cell cycle regulatory genes in primary (de novo) and secondary glioblastomas. 934 29
Recent experimental evidence obtained in Scid mice has suggested that the metastatic process is in large part epigenetically regulated and undergoes partial reversion once the metastatic process is completed: the metastatic colonies become more engaged in the process of growing in situ than actively metastasizing. Based on this experimental evidence, examples were sought of metastatic human cancers where similar reversion to an in situ growth state was occurring. Review of 200 cases of metastatic human breast cancer revealed a 21 per cent incidence of reversion to a ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) growth pattern within axillary nodal metastases. The revertant DCIS areas were characterized by an intact and circumferential basement membrane, as demonstrated by extracellular laminin and type IV collagen immunoreactivity. These revertant DCIS areas could be distinguished from primary DCIS, however, by the absence of surrounding myoepithelial cells in the former, identified in the latter by their positive maspin, S-100, and smooth muscle actin immunoreactivity. The pattern of revertant DCIS, poorly differentiated (comedo) (13 per cent), intermediate (non-comedo) (6 per cent), or well-differentiated (non-comedo) (2%), exhibited complete 100 per cent concordance with the primary DCIS pattern. The concordance of histological patterns held true for even the subtypes of DCIS determined by architectural pattern, such as the micropapillary or cribriform subtypes. Nuclear size by digital image analysis and Her-2/neu,
p53
, and Ki-67 status in the revertant DCIS also exhibited complete concordance with the primary DCIS counterparts. Cases exhibiting a revertant DCIS pattern tended to be ER-negative/
EGFR
-positive and exhibited significant nodal involvement (mean number, 9; mean area, 90 per cent) compared with cases lacking a revertant pattern (mean number, 4; mean area, 15 per cent) (P < 0.01) These findings suggest that reversion of the metastatic phenotype may also be occurring within autochthonous human metastasis.
...
PMID:'Revertant' DCIS in human axillary breast carcinoma metastases. 939 32
At present, the most efficacious and used immunostimulant agent in the superficial bladder cancer immunotherapy field, is the BCG, even if its mechanism of action is still partly unknown. The therapeutic effects of BCG don't seem to depend exclusively on local immune response, so that according to this assertion, this immunohistochemical study had been conducted on 14 patients affected by superficial bladder cancer (pTa-pT1) which aimed to value both the apoptosis and proliferation indexes and the expression of the genetic product
p53
and
EGFR
before and after the exposition of the vesical mucosa to the BCG. The BCG treatment can reduce the proliferation index of the normal urothelial cells in a statistically significant way whereas it would exclude a cytostatic effect mediate by negative modulation of
EGFR
from the cytokinins induced by BCG itself. The index of apoptosis of the urothelium does not increase after BCG and decreased expression of p53 associated after the treatment, although statistically not significant, it would seem to bear, the prophylactic efficacy of BCG according to the follow up of the patients included in the study.
...
PMID:[Cellular proliferation, expression of p53, EGFR and apoptosis index of healthy mucosa of the bladder with TCC; pre- and post-intravesical BCG immunohistochemical study]. 941 99
Malignant human gliomas are the most common forms of primary tumors in the central nerve system. Due to their location and invasive nature, treatment so far has been mainly palliative. Thus, understanding the molecular detail of tumor transformation and progression is crucial for developing effective therapeutic strategy for this fetal tumor. Among the genetic alternations found in these tumors,
p53
inactivation and PDGF/PDGFR activation represent the early events, and the loss of chromosome 10 and gene amplification and rearrangement of
EGFR
represent the late events. Studies with both glioma cell lines and primary tumor tissues have strongly suggested that TGF-alpha and
EGFR
function as an important autocrine loop in supporting proliferation of human glioma, especially in high grade glioma, since elevated TGF-alpha expression is also found in these high grade tumors. Furthermore, down regulation of the expression of TGF-alpha by antisense constructs has been shown to inhibit several types of human tumor cell growth including glioma. Other means of therapeutic approaches using this autocrine loop as a target also include the use of monoclonal antibodies and their cytotoxic conjugated. Considerable understanding of the
EGFR
-mediated signal transduction pathways has become available recently, which including GRB2/mSOS1 mediated MAP kinase activation; JAK/STATs pathway; PLC-gamma pathway. However, much work still needs to be done before a specific component of these pathways can be applied for effective control of tumor growth in the clinic.
...
PMID:The autocrine loop of TGF-alpha/EGFR and brain tumors. 944 27
104 surgery cases of non-small cell (NSLC) and small cell lung carcinoma (SLC) are studied. Oncoprotein bcl-2 is found in 49 out of 104 (47%) cases, more frequently in SLC (71%) than in NSLC (44%) and this correlated with carcinoma morphological malignancy. L-myc oncoprotein and
EGFR
were expressed practically in all cases, oncoprotein of the
p53
mutated gene in 57% cases. The highest content of
p53
was in SLC, large cell and poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma. Percentage of cells with mutated
p53
statistically correlated with morphological malignancy of lung carcinoma. Oncoprotein of Rb gene was revealed in 51%, most frequently in squamous cell carcinoma (71%) and particularly in its well differentiated types. IGFII was found in 74% NSLC and in 100% SLC with cytoplasmic location in tumor cells; the level of expression was higher in SLC. IGFII 2 and 5 were more frequently observed in the foci of keratinization of squamous cell carcinoma. For the first time IGFP B3 was found not only in the cytoplasm but in the nuclei of tumor cells as well. There was a significant positive correlation between the content of IGFIBP3 in the nuclei of tumor cells and morphological malignancy (poor tumor cell differentiation, larger size and metastases). The mean number of proliferating Ki-67 positive cells was 24% but this figure was much higher (47%) in SLC. Squamous cell carcinoma is characterized by a more frequent and stronger expression of CD44 types 5 and 6 in the cytolemma and this may be considered as a marker of squamous cell differentiation of lung carcinoma.
...
PMID:[Immunohistochemistry of biomolecular markers of lung cancer]. 948 14
A large number of oncogenes have been identified as aberrant in gliomas, but only the erbB oncogene (gene encoding the epidermal growth factor receptor [
EGFR
]) is amplified in an appreciable number. The loss or mutation of tumor-suppressor genes located on different autosomes may be associated with progression of malignant gliomas. The
p53
tumor-suppressor gene (located on chromosome 17) is frequently associated with the loss of one allele in malignant gliomas, although a large number of malignant gliomas have no
p53
mutations. Some of the latter tumors have an amplified murine double minute 2 (MDM2) gene, which suppresses
p53
gene activity. Genetic material from chromosome 10 may also be lost, especially in glioblastoma multiforme. In addition to the aberrant expression of
EGFR
, another growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, or PDGF (ligand and/or receptors) can be overexpressed, giving cells a selective growth advantage. The blood-brain barrier is substantially altered in malignant gliomas, resulting in cerebral edema. Therapy for malignant gliomas includes surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. Surgical resection that leaves little residual tumor produces longer survival than less vigorous surgery. Radiation therapy to a dose of at least 60 Gy is required to treat malignant gliomas. Increased survival beyond that produced by standard external radiotherapy requires much larger doses; interstitial radiotherapy permits such dosing. Radiosurgery is being tested. Chemotherapy with nitrosoureas is modestly useful but appears to benefit patients with anaplastic astrocytoma more so than those with glioblastoma.
...
PMID:Biology and treatment of malignant glioma. 950 24
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