Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (tumour suppressor)
5,935 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The HPVs associated with anogenital cancers encode two oncoproteins, E6 and E7. Both E6 and E7 can form specific complexes with tumour suppressor gene products. The E7 protein binds to the retinoblastoma tumour suppressor gene product pRB, with a preference for the underphosphorylated, "active" form of pRB. The E7 proteins derived from the "high risk" HPVs bind to pRB with a higher affinity than the E7 proteins from the "low risk" HPVs. The "high risk" HPV E6 proteins can associate with the p53 tumour suppressor protein. This interaction promotes the degradation of p53 in vitro, which presumably accounts for the very low levels of p53 in cervical carcinoma cell lines. The functional inactivation of pRB and p53 by the HPV oncoproteins E7 and E6, respectively, are likely to be important steps in cervical carcinogenesis, since mutations in the RB and p53 genes were detected in HPV negative but not HPV positive cervical carcinoma cell lines. Cytogenetic studies strongly suggest, however, that additional chromosomal changes may be necessary for carcinogenic progression of HPV induced anogenital lesions.
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PMID:Interactions of HPV E6 and E7 oncoproteins with tumour suppressor gene products. 132 42

The types of malignancy reported in carriers of constitutional ring chromosomes r(11), r(13), and r(22) are concordant with the chromosomal assignment of tumour suppressor loci associated with Wilms' tumour, retinoblastoma, and meningioma. It is suggested that the somatic instability of ring chromosomes may play a role in this association and that constitutional ring chromosomes may be a source for mapping of tumour suppressor loci with the potential for covering most or all of the human genome. The hypothesis predicts the presence of a locus on chromosome 10 associated with follicular carcinoma of the thyroid, in line with previous cytogenetic findings of rearrangements involving chromosome 10 in thyroid tumours, and a locus on chromosome 22 associated with testicular cancer. Development of neurofibromatoses (NF) that do not fulfil the clinical criteria of neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) in carriers with r(22) suggests either the presence of an additional NF locus on chromosome 22 or that ring chromosome mediated predisposition to somatic mutation of a specific tumour suppressor may be associated with atypical development of features usually associated with germline mutations.
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PMID:Constitutional ring chromosomes and tumour suppressor genes. 133 57

Inactivation of the protein product of the wild-type tumour suppressor gene p53 through complexing of the protein with the E6 oncoprotein of human papillomaviruses (HPV) in HPV-infected cells is thought to be important in the aetiology of cervical carcinoma. Mutations of p53 have also been reported in HPV-negative carcinomas, and we now demonstrate loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of chromosome region 17p13 (in which p53 is located) in such tumours. Immunocytochemical staining with monoclonal antimutant-p53 antibody revealed that the carcinomas with LOH on 17p and completely lacking HPV DNA sequences had mutant p53. Thus the LOH had apparently resulted in the loss of the wild-type allele. Consequently, in both HPV-positive and HPV-negative tumours there is loss of function of wild-type p53, in the former because the protein product of the p53 gene complexes with that of the viral E6 gene, in the latter because the protein is altered, presumably as a result of a direct alteration of the p53 gene but possibly because of other post-translational changes. That this mutant allele of the tumour suppressor gene may sometimes behave like an oncogene is suggested by the presence of more than the expected number of copies of the remaining chromosome 17 homologue in some carcinomas.
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PMID:Loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 17p and mutant p53 in HPV-negative cervical carcinomas. 135 66

RFLP (restriction fragment length polymorphism) analysis in 46 ovarian tumour and paired blood samples shows that 33 per cent (5/15) of informative carcinomas had loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at 11p15.4 (Calcitonin locus) and 18% (4/22) had LOH at 11p15.5 (Ha-ras). No LOH was detected in five borderline and four benign ovarian tumours. Analysis of survival in the carcinoma group (37 patients) showed a significantly poorer survival in patients whose tumours showed LOH at either or both of these 11p loci (chi 2 = 7.771, p = 0.005). This suggests the presence of a tumour suppressor gene (tsg) on the short arm of chromosome 11 whose loss is associated with particularly aggressive disease.
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PMID:Allele loss on chromosome 11p is associated with poor survival in ovarian cancer. 136 Aug 88

The RB and p53 tumour suppressor genes encode nuclear proteins that exert an inhibitive effect on cell growth. A large variety of human tumour types manifest loss or mutation of the RB or p53 genes, and p53 mutation is the commonest genetic alteration found in tumour cells. In addition, the RB and p53 proteins may be inactivated by complex formation with viral oncoproteins--for instance, in the case of cervical carcinoma carrying human papilloma virus. In vivo introduction of an intact RB or p53 gene into malignant cells lacking the respective gene results in suppression of the neoplastic phenotype and thus of tumourigenicity, p53 being the more potent of the two in this respect. Further elucidation of tumour suppressor genes may well result in future improvement in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer.
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PMID:[Tumor suppressor genes: mutations in RB and p53 genes are significant carcinogenic factors]. 140 28

The colorectal adenoma-carcinoma sequence was examined in relation to the ectopic expression of the oncofoetal Small Intestinal Mucin Antigen (SIMA), to the development of morphologic changes in the adenoma and perineoplastic mucosa and to indices of malignant potential. Four anti-SIMA MAbs, which define a novel hierarchy of SIMA epitopes in the normal small intestine and adjacent to colorectal cancers, were used in a retrospective immunohistochemical study of Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP, n = 183) and non-familial (n = 44) adenomas. Inappropriate expression of SIMA epitopes was first detected in mucosa adjacent to minute microadenomas larger than three glands, and with increase in size, in increasing amounts within adenomas themselves, but not with microadenomas smaller than three glands or regions of flat mucosa free of adenomas. SIMA epitope expressed in mucosa adjacent to adenomas preceded changes in perineoplastic morphology, which progressed with adenoma growth to resemble transitional mucosa (TM) adjacent to cancers. Thus, the onset of both SIMA expression and morphological changes in TM were consistent with reactive rather than pre-existing field change phenomena. The previously reported hierarchy of four SIMA epitopes (5C5, 3D4, 4D3, 6C5) was also consistently observed in the adenoma-carcinoma sequence, and applied to (i) the order of epitope detection, (ii) the number of positive adenomas and (iii) extent of staining; (iv) the height in the crypt and (v) distance from the adenoma to which epitopes were expressed in perineoplastic mucosa. These observations are consistent with a progression of changes in mucin composition with adenoma development. The percentage of positive adenomas and reactivity scores for each anti-SIMA MAb correlated with increasing adenoma size, degree of dysplasia and growth pattern. SIMA expression appears to predate the earliest reported oncogene and tumour suppressor gene changes, was persistent and increased throughout adenoma development. SIMA epitopes are thus markers of very early neoplastic change, whose expression correlates with malignant potential and may contribute to the accumulation of changes necessary for tumourigenesis.
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PMID:The adenoma-carcinoma sequence in the colorectum--early appearance of a hierarchy of small intestinal mucin antigen (SIMA) epitopes and correlation with malignant potential. 141 17

Development of colon carcinomas can be associated with allelic deletions on several chromosomes, including 5q and 18q. The APC gene on 5q and the DCC gene on 18q have been identified as potential tumour suppressor genes, whose suppression contributes to colon carcinogenesis. To investigate the role of genes in these deleted regions, we have now introduced a single normal human chromosome into a human colon carcinoma cell line, COKFu, through microcell hybridization. Several clones of hybrid cells containing normal chromosome 5, and others containing normal chromosome 18, were obtained. The morphology of the hybrid cells was markedly altered: the hybrids with chromosome 5 exhibited a closely packed polygonal morphology, and the hybrid cells with chromosome 18 were flattened. The cloning efficiency of the hybrid cells in soft agar was reduced from 0.46 to 0% of that of the parental carcinoma cells, and the tumorigenicity of these hybrid cells in athymic nude mice was completely suppressed. The growth properties of the hybrid cells with chromosome 11 were not substantially changed. These results strongly suggest that the genes on normal chromosome 5 and 18 function as tumour suppressors in colon carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Suppression of tumorigenicity in human colon carcinoma cells by introduction of normal chromosome 5 or 18. 167 Sep 65

Recent studies have identified a gene on chromosome 5q, designated MCC (mutated in colorectal cancers), as a candidate for the putative colorectal tumor suppressor gene that is located at 5q21. We examined loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the MCC locus and its vicinity in sporadic colorectal carcinomas, using 12 RFLP (restriction fragment length polymorphism) markers. One clone, L5.71, had been used to identify the MCC gene; all 12 markers also had tight linkage to the gene responsible for adenomatous polyposis coli. All 40 cases studied were informative with at least one marker, and 22 of them (55%) showed LOH at one or more loci. LOH in the tumors was more frequent in the immediate vicinity of L5.71 than in distant parts of the chromosome, and a common region of deletion was detected between markers L5.62 and 15A6. In one case, alleles were retained at L5.71 and at loci proximal to L5.71, but alleles were lost at loci distal to L5.71. In another case, both alleles were retained at L5.71 but alleles were lost at loci proximal and distal to L5.71. These results support the conclusion that a tumor suppressor gene for colorectal carcinoma is located within or around locus L5.71.
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PMID:Frequent loss of heterozygosity at the MCC locus on chromosome 5q21-22 in sporadic colorectal carcinomas. 168 92

Six families of activated protooncogenes, ras, raf, fur, neu, jun and myc have so far been associated with human lung cancer. Human bronchial epithelial cells in vitro are being used to investigate the functional role of these specific oncogenes and growth regulatory genes in carcinogenesis and tumour progression. When transferred into normal human bronchial epithelial cells by the highly efficient protoplast fusion method, the v-Ha-ras oncogene initiates a cascade of events leading to decreased responsiveness of these cells to inducers of squamous differentiation, aneuploidy and, less frequently, 'immortality' and tumorigenicity with metastasis in athymic nude mice. Transfection of the SV40 T antigen gene results in nontumorigenic cell lines that have a nearly normal pathway of terminal squamous differentiation and can be transformed into malignant cells by transfected Ha-ras, N-ras or Ki-ras. The combination of transfected c-myc and c-raf-1 also transforms human bronchial epithelial cells into neoplastic cells that exhibit some phenotypic traits found in small-cell carcinomas. These and other results indicate that proto-oncogenes dysregulate the pathways of growth and differentiation of human bronchial epithelial cells and play an important role in human carcinogenesis. Analyses of allelic deletion and somatic cell hybrids are being used to identify the chromosomal localization of tumour suppressor genes. We have examined 54 non-small-cell bronchogenic carcinomas with 13 polymorphic markers. Loss of heterozygosity was more frequent than among 23 squamous-cell carcinomas than among 23 adenocarcinomas or eight large-cell carcinomas. Loss of heterozygosity for chromosome 17p was found in 89% of cases of squamous-cell carcinoma and 18% of adenocarcinomas. Analysis of chromosome 11 for allelic deletions revealed two commonly deleted regions (11p13 and 11p15.5). Somatic cell hybrids between normal human bronchial epithelial cells and Hut292DM, a lung carcinoma cell line, had a finite lifespan in vitro and were nontumorigenic in athymic nude mice. Tumour suppressive effects of individual or combinations of specific human chromosomes on Hut292DM are being examined by formation of microcell-cell hybrids. Chromosome 11 has tumour suppressor activity in these hybrids. Both of these studies suggest that tumour suppressor genes play a dominant role in lung carcinogenesis and provide in-vitro model systems for isolating these genes by subtraction library and insertional mutagenesis techniques.
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PMID:Role of oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes in human lung carcinogenesis. 185 68

The p53 gene has been implicated as a tumour suppressor, with mutations occurring in many carcinomas, such as colon, breast and lung. We have sequenced exons 5, 7 and 8 containing conserved gene regions in the only available differentiated thyroid follicular carcinoma cell line and found a mutation at position 273, Arg----His, with no normal allele present. The same mutation was also present in DNA from the tumour of origin. However immunohistochemical analysis of 129 human thyroid tumours using a panel of p53 antibodies was unequivocally negative. Southern blotting in 20 cases failed to demonstrate any deletion or rearrangement, and direct genomic sequencing of 20 carcinomas showed normal DNA sequence for exons 5, 7 and 8. Thus p53 abnormalities may not be important in human thyroid carcinogenesis, in contrast to colon, breast and lung. However, the FTC 133 cell line was only established after 132 unsuccessful attempts with other differentiated thyroid follicular tumours. Since this line and the corresponding tumour of origin have a p53 mutation, we propose that p53 mutation may confer on thyroid follicular tumour cells the ability to grow in culture. This has potential applications for the future development of thyroid carcinoma cell lines.
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PMID:Mutation of the p53 gene in a differentiated human thyroid carcinoma cell line, but not in primary thyroid tumours. 192 34


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