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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
ARF
tumour suppressor
protein plays a critical role in the activation of p53 in response to oncogenic stress.
ARF
can activate p53 through nucleolar sequestration of Mdm2. However, several lines of evidence indicate that this is not the only way of action of
ARF
, and alternative mechanisms must exist. p33ING1 is a putative tumour suppresor, which induces cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in a p53-dependent manner. Here, we describe that
ARF
and p33ING1 can interact in vivo. We also show that the subcellular localization of ING1 can be modulated by
ARF
protein levels, causing a displacement from nuclear to nucleolar localization. Finally, the ability of p33ING1 to cause cell-cycle arrest and induction of p21CIP1, or Mdm2, is impaired in
ARF
-deficient primary mouse fibroblasts. Based on these observations, we propose that the interaction with p33ING1 represents a novel mechanism for the tumour suppression function of
ARF
.
...
PMID:A functional link between the tumour suppressors ARF and p33ING1. 1660 80
Squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (HNSCC) is a heterogeneous but largely preventable disease with complex molecular abnormalities. It arises from a premalignant progenitor followed by outgrowth of clonal populations associated with cumulative genetic alterations and phenotypic progression to invasive malignancy. These genetic alterations result in inactivation of multiple
tumour suppressor
genes and activation of proto-oncogenes, including p16(ink4A), p53, cyclin D1, p14(
ARF
), FHIT, RASSF1A, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), and Rb. Intramucosal migration and clonal expansion of transformed cells with formation of abnormal genetic fields appear to be responsible for local recurrences and development of second primary tumours.
...
PMID:Molecular biology of squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. 1664 82
Spinophilin/neurabin 2 has been isolated independently by two laboratories as a protein interacting with protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) and F-actin. Gene analysis and biochemical approaches have contributed to define a number of distinct modular domains in spinophilin that govern protein-protein interactions such as two F-actin-, three potential Src homology 3 (SH3)-, a receptor- and a PP1-binding domains, a PSD95/DLG/zo-1 (PDZ) and three coiled-coil domains, and a potential leucine/isoleucine zipper (LIZ) motif. More than 30 partner proteins of spinophilin have been discovered, including cytoskeletal and cell adhesion molecules, enzymes, guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEF) and regulator of G-protein signalling protein, membrane receptors, ion channels and others proteins like the
tumour suppressor
ARF
. The physiological relevance of some of these interactions remains to be demonstrated. However, spinophilin structure suggests that the protein is a multifunctional protein scaffold that regulates both membrane and cytoskeletal functions. Spinophilin plays important functions in the nervous system where it is implicated in spine morphology and density regulation, synaptic plasticity and neuronal migration. Spinophilin regulates also seven-transmembrane receptor signalling and may provide a link between some of these receptors and intracellular mitogenic signalling events dependent on p70(S6) kinase and Rac G protein-GEF. Strikingly a role for spinophilin in cell growth was demonstrated and this effect was enhanced by its interaction with
ARF
. Here we review the current knowledge of the protein partners of spinophilin and present the available data that are contributing to the appreciation of spinophilin functions.
...
PMID:Spinophilin: from partners to functions. 1673 66
Mammalian cells that sustain oncogenic insults can invoke defensive programmes that either halt their division or trigger their apoptosis, but these countermeasures must be finely tuned to discriminate between physiological and potentially harmful growth-promoting states. By functioning specifically to oppose abnormally prolonged and sustained proliferative signals produced by activated oncogenes, the
ARF
tumour suppressor
antagonizes functions of MDM2 to induce protective responses that depend on the p53 transcription factor and its many target genes. However,
ARF
has been reported to physically associate with proteins other than MDM2 and to have p53-independent activities, most of which remain controversial and poorly understood.
...
PMID:Divorcing ARF and p53: an unsettled case. 1691 96
The INK4b-
ARF
-INK4a locus encodes two members of the INK4 family of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, p15(INK4b) and p16(INK4a), and a completely unrelated protein, known as
ARF
. All three products participate in major
tumour suppressor
networks that are disabled in human cancer and influence key physiological processes such as replicative senescence, apoptosis and stem-cell self-renewal. Transcription from the locus is therefore kept under strict control. Mounting evidence suggests that although the individual genes can respond independently to positive and negative signals in different contexts, the entire locus might be coordinately suppressed by a cis-acting regulatory domain or by the action of Polycomb group repressor complexes.
...
PMID:Regulation of the INK4b-ARF-INK4a tumour suppressor locus: all for one or one for all. 1692 3
The p53 protein has a highly evolutionarily conserved role in metazoans as 'guardian of the genome', mediating cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in response to genotoxic injury. In large, long-lived animals with substantial somatic regenerative capacity, such as vertebrates, p53 is an important
tumour suppressor
--an attribute thought to stem directly from its induction of death or arrest in mutant cells with damaged or unstable genomes. Chemotherapy and radiation exposure both induce widespread p53-dependent DNA damage. This triggers potentially lethal pathologies that are generally deemed an unfortunate but unavoidable consequence of the role p53 has in tumour suppression. Here we show, using a mouse model in which p53 status can be reversibly switched in vivo between functional and inactive states, that the p53-mediated pathological response to whole-body irradiation, a prototypical genotoxic carcinogen, is irrelevant for suppression of radiation-induced lymphoma. In contrast, delaying the restoration of p53 function until the acute radiation response has subsided abrogates all of the radiation-induced pathology yet preserves much of the protection from lymphoma. Such protection is absolutely dependent on p19(
ARF
)--a
tumour suppressor
induced not by DNA damage, but by oncogenic disruption of the cell cycle.
...
PMID:The pathological response to DNA damage does not contribute to p53-mediated tumour suppression. 1697 34
CDKN2A locus on chromosome 9p21 encodes two
tumour suppressor
proteins pl6INK4A, which is a regulator of the retinoblastoma (RB) protein, and p14ARF, which is involved in the
ARF
-Mdm2-p53 pathway. The aim of this study was to determine if CDKN2A gene products are implicated in differentiated thyroid carcinogenesis and progression. We used real-time quantitative RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry to assess both transcripts and proteins levels in 60 tumours specimens. Overexpression of p14ARF and pl6INK4A was observed in follicular adenomas, follicular carcinomas and papillary carcinomas, while downregulation was found in oncocytic adenomas compared to nontumoral paired thyroid tissues. These deregulations were statistically significant for pl6INK4a (P=0.006) in follicular adenomas and close to statistical significance for p14ARF in follicular adenomas (P=0.06) and in papillary carcinomas (P=0.05). In all histological types, except papillary carcinomas, we observed a statistically significant relationship between p14ARF and E2F1 (r=0.64 to 1, P<0.05). Our data are consistent with involvement of CDKN2A transcript upregulation in thyroid follicular tumorigenesis as an early event. However, these deregulations do not appear to be correlated to the clinical outcome and they could not be used as potential prognostic markers.
...
PMID:The status of CDKN2A alpha (p16INK4A) and beta (p14ARF) transcripts in thyroid tumour progression. 1711 77
The
tumour suppressor
genes, TP53 and RB1, and four genes involved in their regulation, INK4a,
ARF
, MDM2 and MDMX, were analysed in a series of 36 post-radiotherapy radiation-induced sarcomas. One-third of the tumours developed in patients carrying a germline mutation of RB1 that predisposed them to retinoblastoma and radiation-induced sarcomas. The genetic inactivation of RB1 and/or TP53 genes was frequently observed in these sarcomas. These inactivations were owing to an interplay between point mutations and losses of large chromosome segments. Radiation-induced somatic mutations were observed in TP53, but not in RB1 or in the four other genes, indicating an early role of TP53 in the radio-sarcomagenesis. RB1 and TP53 genes were biallelically coinactivated in all sarcomas developing in the context of the predisposition, indicating that both genes played a major role in the formation of these sarcomas. In the absence of predisposition, TP53 was biallelically inactivated in one-third of the sarcomas, whereas at least one allele of RB1 was wild type. In both genetic contexts, the TP53 pathway was inactivated by genetic lesions and not by the activation of the
ARF
/MDM2/MDMX pathway, as recently shown in retinoblastomas. Together, these findings highlight the intricate tissue- and aetiology-specific relationships between TP53 and RB1 pathways in tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:RB1 and TP53 pathways in radiation-induced sarcomas. 1736 43
The
tumour suppressor
protein
ARF
provides a defence mechanism against hyperproliferative stresses that can result from the aberrant activation of oncogenes. Accordingly,
ARF
is silenced or deleted in many human cancers. Activation of
ARF
can arrest growth and cell cycle progression, or trigger apoptosis. A principle mediator of these effects is p53, which
ARF
stabilizes by binding and inhibiting MDM2. However,
ARF
has additional targets and remains able to block growth in the absence of p53, albeit less efficiently. For example,
ARF
can suppress rRNA production in a p53-independent manner. We have found that the synthesis of tRNA by RNA polymerase III is also inhibited in response to
ARF
. However, in contrast to its effects on rRNA synthesis,
ARF
is unable to inhibit tRNA gene transcription when p53 is ablated. These results add to the growing list of cellular changes that can be triggered by
ARF
induction.
...
PMID:RNA polymerase III transcription is repressed in response to the tumour suppressor ARF. 1743 68
The acetyl-transferase Tip60 might influence tumorigenesis in multiple ways. First, Tip60 is a co-regulator of transcription factors that either promote or suppress tumorigenesis, such as Myc and p53. Second, Tip60 modulates DNA-damage response (DDR) signalling, and a DDR triggered by oncogenes can counteract tumour progression. Using E(mu)-myc transgenic mice that are heterozygous for a Tip60 gene (Htatip) knockout allele (hereafter denoted as Tip60+/- mice), we show that Tip60 counteracts Myc-induced lymphomagenesis in a haplo-insufficient manner and in a time window that is restricted to a pre- or early-tumoral stage. Tip60 heterozygosity severely impaired the Myc-induced DDR but caused no general DDR defect in B cells. Myc- and p53-dependent transcription were not affected, and neither were Myc-induced proliferation, activation of the
ARF
-p53
tumour suppressor
pathway or the resulting apoptotic response. We found that the human TIP60 gene (HTATIP) is a frequent target for mono-allelic loss in human lymphomas and head-and-neck and mammary carcinomas, with concomitant reduction in mRNA levels. Immunohistochemical analysis also demonstrated loss of nuclear TIP60 staining in mammary carcinomas. These events correlated with disease grade and frequently concurred with mutation of p53. Thus, in both mouse and human, Tip60 has a haplo-insufficient
tumour suppressor
activity that is independent from-but not contradictory with-its role within the
ARF
-p53 pathway. We suggest that this is because critical levels of Tip60 are required for mounting an oncogene-induced DDR in incipient tumour cells, the failure of which might synergize with p53 mutation towards tumour progression.
...
PMID:Tip60 is a haplo-insufficient tumour suppressor required for an oncogene-induced DNA damage response. 1772 59
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