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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The p53
tumour suppressor
gene is intensively studied because mutations in this gene are the most common genetic alteration so far identified in human cancer. Considerable emphasis has thus been placed on characterizing the biological differences between mutant and wild-type p53 protein. This has led to the realization that in cultured cells,
mutant p53
behaves like an oncogene, whereas wild-type p53 is a tumor suppressor gene. The p53 protein is also a target for the tumour virus oncogene products SV40 large T, adenovirus E1B, and human papillomavirus type 16 E6, which are all capable of forming complexes to the p53 protein. Although p53 represents an extremely important cellular regulatory molecule which is well conserved, there exists two allelic variants of wild-type human p53 that differ both in primary and confirmational structure. One variant contains an arginine at amino acid 72 (p53Arg), whereas the other form contains a proline at this residue (p53Pro). The possible implications for more than one allelic variant of wild-type human p53 in the general population is unknown. The present study was undertaken to compare some of the biological features of the different wild-type p53 variants. We present data demonstrating that there was a post-transcriptional selection against accumulation of both variants of wild-type human p53 in 3T3-A31 cells, arguing that both forms are proliferation inhibitory in these cells. Both variants of human p53 were stabilized by SV40 large T, but did not displace mouse p53 from SV40 large T. Neither allelic variant of human p53 was able to reduce significantly SV40-mediated anchorage-independent growth of 3T3-A31 cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Molecular analysis of different allelic variants of wild-type human p53. 129 28
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
The
tumour suppressor
gene p53, located on the short arm of chromosome 17, encodes for a nuclear protein which regulates cell proliferation by inhibiting cells entering S-phase. p53 mutations are alleged to be the commonest genetic abnormality in human cancer. We studied
mutant p53
oncoprotein expression, using PAb1801 monoclonal antibody immunohistochemistry, in 25 'ideal' keratoacanthomas and 26 well-, 19 moderately and 18 poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinomas of the skin. While there was a highly significant trend in the proportion of p53 oncoprotein-positive lesions from keratoacanthomas to poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinomas (chi 2 = 17.13, df = 1, exact P = 0.00003), p53 expression was inadequate for distinguishing keratoacanthoma from well-differentiated squamous cell carcinoma (chi 2 = 2.55, df = 1, exact P = 0.18; corresponding to a sensitivity of 0.84 and a specificity of only 0.36).
...
PMID:Mutant p53 oncogene expression in keratoacanthoma and squamous cell carcinoma. 833 63
Wild-type and
mutant p53
proteins exhibit opposing activities in respectively suppressing and promoting tumour development. In a rat embryo fibroblast cell line transformed with a murine temperature-sensitive p53 gene, p53 functions as a oncogene at 37 degrees C and as a
tumour suppressor
at 32 degrees C [Michalovitz, D., Halevy, O. & Oren, M. (1990). Cell, 62, 671-680]. We have used this cell line to investigate whether this temperature-dependent switching of function involves changes in the phosphorylation of p53 protein. Monoclonal antibodies PAb246 and PAb240 were used to immunoprecipitate metabolically 32P-labelled p53 protein in the 'wild-type' or mutant conformation from cells grown at 32 degrees C or 37 degrees C. Tryptic phosphopeptide maps were prepared from the isolated 'wild-type' and
mutant p53
proteins. At 32 degrees C and 37 degrees C phosphopeptide maps of the 'wild-type' and mutant protein were identical. This demonstrates that the temperature-dependent conformation change, and associated functional change, in the p53 protein does not involve a change in the state of phosphorylation.
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PMID:The conformational change of a murine temperature-sensitive p53 protein is independent of a change in phosphorylation status. 163 Aug 25
The development of Friend virus induced murine erythroleukaemia is associated with specific genetic events. One of these events is loss of wild type p53 expression, which can occur by internal deletion or proviral insertion in the p53 gene and by single point mutations in the coding sequence. In all cases, the corresponding wild type allele is absent. The high frequency of observed p53 mutations strongly suggests that inactivation of p53 may be an obligatory step in the development of Friend disease. Further evidence that abrogation of normal p53 expression contributes to the development of malignant clones was provided by in vitro reconstitution experiments in Friend cell lines: whereas exogenous
mutant p53
was stably expressed in p53 negative FCLs, long term wild type p53 expression was not detected. Friend erythroleukaemia arises as a late consequence of infection of susceptible mice with Friend virus. In addition to p53 gene mutations, proviral insertions occur frequently adjacent to one of two cellular genes, Spi-1/PU.1 or Fli-1. Aberrant expression of these genes may therefore be involved in virus induced erythroleukaemia. Interaction of SFFV env gp55 with the EPO-R also appears to be important in providing a mitogenic signal to infected cells. The order in which these events occur and whether the order is relevant to the progression of the disease are not known. Investigation of the stepwise appearance of these events could provide information on the possible interactions of the gene products involved. Abrogation of normal p53 expression is not restricted to Friend erythroleukaemia: the observation of p53 mutations and allele loss in human breast, lung, colon and hepatocellular carcinomas and in leukaemia suggests that mutation of p53 may be the most common genetic abnormality detected in human cancer (reviewed in this issue). Studies of p53 expression in FCLs provided an early indication that p53 was a
tumour suppressor
gene. Further studies of the mechanisms by which wild type and
mutant p53
affect the growth of p53 negative FCLs may reveal important biochemical properties of p53 in relation to cell cycle control and differentiation of erythroid cells.
...
PMID:Friend virus induced murine erythroleukaemia: the p53 locus. 163 45
Point mutations in the p53 gene are the most frequently identified genetic change in human cancer. They convert murine p53 from a
tumour suppressor
gene into a dominant transforming oncogene able to immortalize primary cells and bring about full transformation in combination with an activated ras gene. In both the human and murine systems the mutations lie in regions of p53 conserved from man to Xenopus. We have developed a monoclonal antibody to p53 designated PAb240 which does not immunoprecipitate wild type p53. A series of different p53 mutants all react more strongly with PAb240 than with PAb246. The PAb240 reactive form of p53 cannot bind to SV40 large T antigen but does bind to HSP70. In contrast, the PAb246 form binds to T antigen but not to HSP70. PAb240 recognizes all forms of p53 when they are denatured. It reacts with all mammalian p53 and chicken p53 in immunoblots. We propose that immunoprecipitation of p53 by PAb240 is diagnostic of mutation in both murine and human systems and suggest that the different point mutations which convert p53 from a recessive to a dominant oncogene exert a common conformational effect on the protein. This conformational change abolishes T antigen binding and promotes self-oligomerization. These results are consistent with a dominant negative model where
mutant p53
protein binds to and neutralizes the activity of p53 in the wild type conformation.
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PMID:Activating mutations in p53 produce a common conformational effect. A monoclonal antibody specific for the mutant form. 169 10
The expression of the
tumour suppressor
gene p53 was analysed in 11 human breast cancer cell lines by immunohistochemistry, immunoprecipitation and cDNA sequencing. We used a panel of anti-p53 monoclonal antibodies for cell staining and found abnormalities in every case. Eight of the cell lines produce a form of p53 which can be immunoprecipitated by the monoclonal antibody PAb240 but not by PAb1620. In the murine system PAb240 only immunoprecipitates
mutant p53
. We sequenced p53 cDNA directly from four of the PAb240 positive cell lines using asymmetric PCR templates. All four contained missense mutations in p53 RNA, with no detectable expression of the wild type sequence. Different residues were affected in each cell line, but all the mutations changed amino acids conserved from man to Xenopus. These results imply that as in the murine system, the PAb240 antibody reliably detects a wide variety of p53 mutations and that these mutations have a common effect on the structure of p53. Immunohistochemical data suggest that p53 mutation is the commonest genetic alteration so far detected in primary breast cancer.
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PMID:Genetic and immunochemical analysis of mutant p53 in human breast cancer cell lines. 169 91
The
tumour suppressor
gene p53 has been found to be mutated or inactivated at high frequency in several common human tumours. We have examined a series of exocrine pancreatic carcinomas for over-expression of mutant forms of p53 by immunohistochemistry with a panel of specific antibodies. We found immunodetectable p53 in 13 of 22 (60%) frozen pancreatic cancers and seven of 13 pancreatic cell lines. One of the antibodies, CM1, recognises p53 in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded archival material and using this reagent we found immunodetectable p53 in 28 of 124 (23%) pancreatic cancers. We have successfully demonstrated the presence of point mutations by direct sequencing of genomic DNA extracted from archival tissue showing CM1 immunoreactivity. We conclude that p53 activation is an important event in human pancreatic tumorigenesis and that the CM1 antibody can detect a proportion of cases of overexpression of
mutant p53
in archival pathological material.
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PMID:Abnormalities of the p53 tumour suppressor gene in human pancreatic cancer. 176 70
A
tumour suppressor
function for p53 is indicated in human lung cancer and in carcinoma of the colorectum. Loss of suppressor function, by mutation of the p53 gene, is associated with activation of p53 as an oncogene. The suppressor (wild type) and oncogenic (mutant) forms of the murine p53 protein are distinguishable at the molecular level by reactivity with anti-p53 monoclonal antibodies. For example, activated
mutant p53
fails to react with PAb246 (p53-246 degrees). We now demonstrate that wild type p53 mRNA can be expressed either as p53-246+ or p53-246 degrees. We propose that p53-246 degrees may represent an allosteric variant of wild type p53 compatible with positive growth control. Thus, for wild type p53 the variants p53-246+ and p53-246 degrees may reflect suppressor and activator functions of p53 in the normal control of cell proliferation. For human p53 we present evidence that the epitope recognised by PAb1620 is analogous to that for PAb246 on murine p53. Thus the epitope for PAb1620 may prove to be of use as a marker for wild type human p53 with anti-oncogenic function.
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PMID:Evidence for allosteric variants of wild-type p53, a tumour suppressor protein. 213 77
The p53 gene has been a constant source of fascination since its discovery nearly a decade ago. Originally considered to be an oncogene, several convergent lines of research have indicated that the wild-type gene product actually functions as a
tumour suppressor
gene. For example, expression of the neoplastic phenotype is inhibited, rather than promoted, when rat cells are transfected with the murine wild-type p53 gene together with
mutant p53
genes and/or other oncogenes. Moreover, in human tumours, the short arm of chromosome 17 is often deleted. In colorectal cancers, the smallest common region of deletion is centred at 17p13.1; this region harbours the p53 gene, and in two tumours examined in detail, the remaining (non-deleted) p53 alleles were found to contain mutations. This result was provocative because allelic deletion coupled with mutation of the remaining allele is a theoretical hallmark of tumour-suppressor genes. In the present report, we have attempted to determine the generality of this observation; that is, whether tumours with allelic deletions of chromosome 17p contain
mutant p53
genes in the allele that is retained. Our results suggest that (1) most tumours with such allelic deletions contain p53 point mutations resulting in amino-acid substitutions, (2) such mutations are not confined to tumours with allelic deletion, but also occur in at least some tumours that have retained both parental 17p alleles, and (3) p53 gene mutations are clustered in four 'hot-spots' which exactly coincide with the four most highly conserved regions of the gene. These results suggest that p53 mutations play a role in the development of many common human malignancies.
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PMID:Mutations in the p53 gene occur in diverse human tumour types. 253 45
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