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

Four genetic polymorphisms in the APC and MCC genes at chromosome 5q21 were analysed for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in 97 primary squamous carcinomas and adenocarcinomas of the lung. LOH was identified in at least two polymorphic loci in 41 percent of informative cases. There was no significant difference in the frequency of LOH between squamous carcinomas and adenocarcinomas. Within the adenocarcinoma group, however, LOH appeared to be more common in tumours having a bronchial origin (5/9; 56 per cent) than in parenchymal adenocarcinoma (6/21; 29 per cent). All 32 tumours showing LOH at one or more polymorphic sites were examined for mutations in the mutation cluster region (MCR) of APC by single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) analysis. Mutations were not detected in any of these cases. We therefore propose that it is likely that a tumour suppressor gene on 5q other than APC is involved in the pathogenesis of lung cancer.
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PMID:Loss of heterozygosity at 5q21 in non-small cell lung cancer: a frequent event but without evidence of apc mutation. 894 12

The recent progress in molecular biology has led to the elucidation of pathogenesis of lung cancer. The development of a lung cancer requires multiple genetic changes, consisting of the activation of oncogenes, including the K-ras and myc genes, and of inactivation of tumour suppressor genes, including the Rb, p53 and CDKN2 genes. Knowing the specific genes undergoing such changes should be useful as biomarkers for the early detection of cells destined to become malignant. Moreover, such genetic changes could be targets of newly designed drugs and gene-based therapy. Although the angiotensin I-converting enzyme was originally discovered in equine plasma, it has been recognized in various organs and cells other than vascular endothelial cells. This enzyme is also known to have wide substrate specificity to many peptides. The definite roles of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) in the respiratory system are largely unknown. Recent progress in molecular biology of the ACE, however, gives us a good chance to look over the significance of ACE in respiratory diseases as well as cardiovascular disorders. In this review, we show the recent advances in the basic studies of the ACE and refer to its clinical application.
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PMID:Genetic factors in lung disease. Part II: Lung cancer and angiotensin converting enzyme gene. 944 Nov 31

The p53 gene is well known as a tumour suppressor gene. In addition, the mutated p53 gene is detected in a variety of human cancers including lung cancer, and is considered as an oncogene. Lung cancer is also frequently associated with interstitial lung diseases. Therefore, it may be possible to hypothesize that there might be some abnormality of p53 gene in interstitial lung diseases. This work examined the relationship between the p53 protein and gene in lung tissues of 28 patients with interstitial lung diseases. Among 28 patients, 13 cases were pathologically diagnosed to have usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP), 12 cases were diagnosed as having collagen vascular lung diseases, and three cases were diagnosed to have a non-specific interstitial pneumonia. Twenty-three tissue samples were obtained by open lung biopsy and five samples were taken by autopsy. Paraffin-embedded tissues were treated by microwave, and stained with an anti-p53 antibody (DO7) by the Avidin-Biotin-Peroxidase (ABC) method. In selected patients, mutations in exons 5-8 of the p53 gene were also examined by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis and DNA sequence. In addition, the presence of anti-p53 antibodies in patients' sera was screened for by ELISA. Fifteen samples (53.6%) revealed overexpression of the p53 protein in the nuclei of alveolar epithelial cells. However, SSCP or sequence analysis, which was performed in 13 tissues, showed no mutations in exons 5-8 of the p53 gene. In conclusion, p53 proteins were overexpressed in interstitial lung diseases, and the expressed p53 protein was considered to be wild-type. This wild-type p53 protein may play a role in blocking the transformation of proliferative epithelial cells.
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PMID:Overexpression of p53 protein in interstitial lung diseases. 961 10

The p53 tumour suppressor gene is at the crossroads of a network of cellular pathways including cell cycle checkpoints, DNA repair, chromosomal segregation, and apoptosis. These pathways have evolved to maintain the stability of the genome during cellular stress from DNA damage, hypoxia, and activated oncogenes. The high frequency of p53 mutations in human cancer is a reflection of the importance of p53 involvement in this network of pathways during human carcinogenesis. An electronic database containing p53 mutations from more than 9000 cancers (http:/(/)www.iarc.fr/p53/homepage.html) can be used to generate hypotheses for further clinical, epidemiological, and laboratory investigations. For example, one can hypothesize that (a) p53 mutations vary in their pathobiological significance; (b) cellular content influences the selection of p53 mutations in clonally derived cancers; (c) the location and type of mutation within the p53 gene provide clues to functional domains in the gene product; and (d) the p53 mutation spectrum can be a molecular link between aetiological agents and human cancer. This review will focus on the role of p53 and cancer susceptibility genes in the molecular pathogenesis and epidemiology of human lung cancer.
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PMID:Molecular epidemiology of human cancer risk: gene-environment interactions and p53 mutation spectrum in human lung cancer. 1034 2

In the search for a tumour suppressor gene in the 3p21.3 region we isolated two genes, RBM5 and RBM6. Gene RBM5 maps to the region which is homozygously deleted in the small cell lung cancer cell line GLC20; RBM6 crosses the telomeric breakpoint of this deletion. Sequence comparison revealed that at the amino acid level both genes show 30% identity. They contain two zinc finger motifs, a bipartite nuclear signal and two RNA binding motifs, suggesting that the proteins for which RBM5 and RBM6 are coding have a DNA/RNA binding function and are located in the nucleus. Northern and Southern analysis did not reveal any abnormalities. By SSCP analysis of 16 lung cancer cell lines we found only in RBM5 a single presumably neutral mutation. By RT-PCR we demonstrated the existence of two alternative splice variants of RBM6, one including and one excluding exon 5, in both normal lung tissue and lung cancer cell lines. Exclusion of exon 5 results in a frameshift which would cause a truncated protein of 520 amino acids instead of 1123 amino acids. In normal lung tissue, the relative amount of the shorter transcript was much greater than that in the lung tumour cell lines, which raises the question whether some tumour suppressor function may be attributed to the derived shorter protein.
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PMID:A comparison of genomic structures and expression patterns of two closely related flanking genes in a critical lung cancer region at 3p21.3. 1035 38

p73 gene, a new p53 homologue, has been identified: it supposedly acts as tumour suppressor gene in neuroblastoma. To clarify whether p73 might be involved in lung carcinogenesis, we examined p73 expression in resected lung cancer and paired normal lung in 60 cases using semi-quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). We also examined p73 gene status in three representative cases using Southern blot, and p53 gene alteration in 49 cases using PCR-single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) and direct sequence. In 87% of the cases (52/60) p73 expression in tumour was more than twice as high as that in paired normal lung tissues, and the difference between p73 expression in tumour and normal lung tissue was significant (P < 0.0001). However, Southern blot analysis revealed that none of the cases showed p73 gene amplification. Compared with clinicopathological characteristics, p73 expression correlates significantly with histological differences and age of patient, independently (P < 0.05). Concerning p53 gene status, 43% (21/49) showed p53 gene alteration, but there was no correlation between p73 overexpression and p53 gene alteration. Our results suggest that need for further functional analysis of the role of p73 in lung carcinogenesis.
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PMID:The expression of p73 is increased in lung cancer, independent of p53 gene alteration. 1040 9

The oncogene product epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R), the tumour suppressor gene product p53 and anti-p53 antibodies are detectable in the serum of certain cancer patients. Increased levels of some of these products were reported in lung cancer patients after occupational asbestos exposure and after exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or vinylchloride. In the first step, this study investigated the possible diagnostic value of serum EGF-R, p53-protein and anti-p53 antibodies, measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, in lung tumour patients. In addition to being investigated on a molecular epidemiological basis, these parameters were examined as biomarkers of carcinogenesis, especially with regard to asbestos incorporation effects or of radon-induced lung cancers. Also, a possible effect of cigarette smoking and age dependence were studied. A total of 116 male patients with lung or pleural tumours were examined. The histological classification was four small-cell cancers, six large-cell cancers, 32 adenocarcinomas, 47 squamous carcinomas, 12 mixed lung carcinomas, five diffuse malignant mesotheliomas and ten lung metastasis of extrapulmonary tumours. Twenty-two lung cancers and all mesotheliomas were related to asbestos, 22 lung cancers were related to ionizing radiation and 61 patients had cigarette smoke-related lung cancer. Besides these patients 50 male patients with non-malignant lung or pleural diseases were included; of the latter eight subjects suffered from asbestosis. Controls were 129 male subjects without any lung disease. No significantly elevated or decreased serum values for p53 protein, EGF-R, or anti-p53 antibodies as a function of histological tumour type, age, or degree and type of exposure (asbestos, smoking, ionizing radiation) could be found. The utility of p53-protein, EGF-R and anti-p53 antibodies as routine biomarkers for screening occupationally derived lung cancers is limited.
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PMID:p53 protein, EGF receptor, and anti-p53 antibodies in serum from patients with occupationally derived lung cancer. 1047 Oct 51

Gene therapy encompasses deliberate alteration of the genetic material of cancer cells. Somatic-cell therapy involves the administration to cancer patients of living cells that have been genetically manipulated or processed to change their biological characteristics. Gene therapy of cancer, although much hyped, is still in its very early infancy. Current approaches to delivering genes into cells include physico-chemical methods, viral vectors and direct DNA injection. None of these strategies is in any way perfect and their efficacy leaves much to be desired. Based on the somatic mutation theory of carcinogenesis, it would be attractive to repair genetic alterations responsible for neoplastic transformation and clonal evolution of cancer cells. Attempts have been made to replace inactivated tumour suppressor genes in cancer cells through intact wild type gene copies, or to suppress the leukaemogenic effects of chromosomal fusion genes in leukaemia through antisense oligonucleotides. One of the snags of these concepts is that cancer cells harbour several if not myriads of mutated genes, and clonal tumour heterogeneity seems to be the rule rather than the exception. It is at present impossible to repair all gene mutations in cancer lesions of a given patient if such were to be the aim of therapy. Nevertheless, some interesting clinical data have been reported. These include the local injection via bronchoscopy of p53 wild type gene copies into p53-deficient lung cancer lesions and other tumours. Somatic-cell therapy includes a considerable spectrum of interventions. Tumour cells may be transduced with genes which upon their expression will render the tumour cells more immunogenic. Tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes may be harvested, transduced with a gene of interest and re-injected. Since they recognise tumours specifically, they will serve as vehicles to carry therapeutic genes into cancer lesions where the gene product can exert an anti-cancer effect. Such attempts might increase the immunogenicity of tumours considerably. Examples are the transduction of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes with a gene for tumour necrosis factor alpha or the transduction of tumour cells with the gene for granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. Protocols on gene therapy and somatic-cell therapy seem to be a worthy goal of cancer research. However, it seems unlikely that gene therapy will provide magic anti-cancer bullets in the near future or the definitive cancer cure, although this is often promised in the media. Careful clinical and laboratory research will pave the way towards stepwise improvement of cancer patient care.
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PMID:[Molecular therapy in malignant tumors]. 1060 49

p53 tumour suppressor gene alterations are one of the most frequent genetic events in lung cancer. A subset of patients with p53 mutation and cancer exhibited circulating serum anti-p53 self-antibodies (p53-Ab). The prevalence of these antibodies in lung cancer is currently being analysed in a multicentric study. In a group of homogeneous SCLC patients, p53-Ab were detected in 20/97 (20.6%) individuals. In this group of patients, Cox's multivariate analysis identified disease extent (p = 0.022), WHO initial performance status greater than 0 (p = 0.005), and the absence of a complete response after 6 months of treatment (p < 0.0001) as independent prognostic variables, with p53-Ab being of borderline significance (p = 0.051). In the subset of limited-stage SCLC patients, Cox's multivariate analysis found p53-Ab (p = 0.033), WHO initial performance status greater than 0 (p = 0.028), and absence of a complete response (p < 0.001) to be independent prognostic variables. Thus, actuarial analysis showed that patients with limited-stage SCLC and p53-Ab had a median survival time of 10 months, whereas limited-stage SCLC patients without p53-Ab had a 17-month median survival time (p = 0.014).Therefore, serum assay of p53-Ab could help to identify a population of SCLC patients with an especially poor prognosis. This population could represent patients with tumours harboring aggressive p53 mutations.
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PMID:Prognostic significance of serum p53 antibodies in patients with limited-stage small cell lung cancer. 1071 35

Squamous cell lung carcinomas (SCC) from former employees of the Wismut uranium mining company (Saxony, Germany) were obtained from the Stollberg Archive in order to screen for p53 tumour suppressor gene codon 249 arg-->met hotspot mutations, a putative molecular bio-dosimeter of alpha-particle (radon) exposure (Taylor et al (1994) Lancet 343: 86-87; McDonald et al (1995) Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prevent 4: 791-793). Of the 29 archived samples of SCC meeting quality criteria for DNA analysis by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and Haelll restriction enzyme digestion, two tumours were found that harboured this mutation. DNA sequencing confirmed the presence of a G to T base substitution within the Haelll site spanning codons 249 and 250 of the p53 gene that results in replacement of arginine (wild-type) by methionine at residue 249. When these data are combined with those from our previous study of tumours from the Stollberg Archive in which 50 lung tumours were examined, (including nine SCCs), we conclude that the G-->T (arg-->met) codon 249 mutation prevalence in the Wismut miner cohort is not sharply elevated in lung cancers in general (two mutations/79 tumours), or specifically in SCCs of the lung (two mutations/38 SCC) when compared to data from lung cancer patients with no reported occupational exposure to radon gas.
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PMID:Analysis of radon-associated squamous cell carcinomas of the lung for a p53 gene hotspot mutation. 1073 42


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