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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two common genetic alterations in colon carcinoma, p53 mutation and microsatellite instability (MSI), were investigated to determine their prognostic importance for cancer-specific survival and response to adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with Dukes' C colon cancer. The p53
tumour suppressor
gene encodes for a nuclear phosphoprotein involved in cellular response to DNA damage, while MSI is a characteristic feature of tumours with defective DNA mismatch repair. The cellular response mechanisms to DNA-damaging agents in tumours with
mutant p53
or MSI may as a consequence differ, and this might translate into different outcomes following adjuvant chemotherapy. A consecutive series of 388 Dukes' C colon carcinomas with 5-year median follow-up was analysed for p53 mutation and for MSI (in proximal/transverse carcinomas only) using polymerase chain reaction single-strand conformation polymorphism. The incidence of p53 mutation was 28% in all carcinomas while that of MSI in proximal/transverse carcinomas was 19%. One hundred and thirty-three patients (34%) received adjuvant chemotherapy (5-fluorouracil/levamisole) with curative intent. The presence of p53 mutation did not predict for survival in either the treated or untreated groups. The presence of MSI in the proximal/transverse colon carcinoma group was associated with significantly better 5-year survival: 58 versus 32% (p = 0.015, log rank test). This was largely due to better survival observed in the MSI subgroup that received adjuvant chemotherapy (p = 0.017, log rank test). Further work in prospective, randomised clinical trials investigating the effects of adjuvant therapy should consider incorporating MSI status in order to determine whether this is an independent predictive factor for survival and/or response to adjuvant chemotherapy.
...
PMID:p53 gene mutation, microsatellite instability and adjuvant chemotherapy: impact on survival of 388 patients with Dukes' C colon carcinoma. 1064 41
The
tumour suppressor
p53 is mutated in half of all human cancers, most frequently with missense substitutions in its core domain. We present a new assessment of the mutation database based on quantitative folding and DNA-binding studies of the isolated core domain. Our data identify five distinct mutant classes that correlate with four well-defined regions of the core domain structure. On extrapolation to 37 degrees C the wild-type protein has a stability of 3.0 kcal/mol. This also emerges as an oncogenic threshold: all beta-sandwich mutants destabilized by this amount (50% denatured) are expected to promote cancer. Other weakly destabilizing mutations are restricted to loop 3 in the DNA-binding region. Drugs that stabilize
mutant p53
folding have the potential to reactivate apoptotic signalling pathways in tumour cells either by transactivation-dependent or independent pathways. Using an affinity ligand as a proof of principle we have recovered the thermodynamic stability of the hotspot G245S. With reference states for the five mutant classes as a guide, future therapeutic strategies may similarly stabilize partially structured or binding states of
mutant p53
that restore limited p53 pathways to tumour suppression.
...
PMID:Quantitative analysis of residual folding and DNA binding in mutant p53 core domain: definition of mutant states for rescue in cancer therapy. 1071 66
The
tumour suppressor
gene, p53, and genes coding for positive signal transduction factors can influence transit through cell-cycle checkpoints and modulate radiosensitivity. Here we examine the effects of RAF1 protein on the rate of exit from a G2/M block induced by gamma-irradiation in relation to intrinsic cellular radiosensitivity in human cell lines expressing wild-type p53 (wtp53) protein as compared to
mutant p53
(mutp53) protein. Cell lines which expressed mutp53 protein were all relatively radioresistant and exhibited no relationship between RAF1 protein and cellular radiosensitivity. Cell lines expressing wtp53 protein, however, showed a strong relationship between RAF1 protein levels and the radiosensitivity parameter SF2. In addition, when post-irradiation perturbation of G2/M transit was compared using the parameter T50 (time after the peak of G2/M delay at which 50% of the cells had exited from a block induced by 2 Gy of irradiation), RAF1 was related to T50 in wtp53, but not mutp53, cell lines. Cell lines which expressed wtp53 protein and high levels of RAF1 had shorter T50s and were also more radiosensitive. These results suggest a cooperative role for wtp53 and RAF1 protein in determining cellular radiosensitivity in human cells, which involves control of the G2/M checkpoint.
...
PMID:Combined RAF1 protein expression and p53 mutational status provides a strong predictor of cellular radiosensitivity. 1099 58
The
tumour suppressor
gene, p53, plays an important role in tumour development. Under low levels of oxygen (hypoxia), cells expressing wild-type p53 undergo programmed cell death (apoptosis), whereas cells expressing mutations in the p53 gene may survive and express angiogenic growth factors that stimulate tumour vascularization. Given that cells expressing mutations in the p53 gene have been observed in many forms of human tumour, it is important to understand how both wild-type and mutant cells react to hypoxic conditions. In this paper a mathematical model is presented to investigate the effects of alternating periods of hypoxia and normoxia (normal oxygen levels) on a population of wild-type and
mutant p53
tumour cells. The model consists of three coupled ordinary differential equations that describe the densities of the two cell types and the oxygen concentration and, as such, may describe the growth of avascular tumours in vitro and/or in vivo. Numerical and analytical techniques are used to determine how changes in the system parameters influence the time at which mutant cells become dominant within the population. A feedback mechanism, which switches off the oxygen supply when the total cell density exceeds a threshold value, is introduced into the model to investigate the impact that vessel collapse (and the associated hypoxia) has on the time at which the mutant cells become dominant within vascular tumours growing in vivo. Using the model we can predict the time it takes for a subpopulation of
mutant p53
tumour cells to become the dominant population within either an avascular tumour or a localized region of a vascular tumour. Based on independent experimental results, our model suggests that the mutant population becomes dominant more quickly in vivo than in vitro (12 days vs 17 days).
...
PMID:Estimating the selective advantage of mutant p53 tumour cells to repeated rounds of hypoxia. 1114 80
Clinical and experimental studies have suggested that tumour hypoxia is associated with poor treatment outcome and that loss of apoptotic potential may play a role in malignant progression of neoplastic cells. The
tumour suppressor
gene p53 induces apoptosis under certain conditions and microenvironmental tumour hypoxia may select for mutant tumour cells with diminished apoptotic potential due to lack of p53 function. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic relevance of oxygenation status for treatment outcome and to compare pre-treatment tumour oxygenation measurements were done in 31 of those by PCR using DNA extracted from paraffin-embaedded sections (n = 2) or frozen biopsies (n = 29). The overall median of the tumour median pO(2)was 19 mmHg (range 1-58 mmHg). Only 6 tumours had functional p53 mutations and no association was found between
mutant p53
and tumour hypoxia. Five out of 6 STS with lower histopathological grade were well-oxygenated whereas high-grade STS were both hypoxic and well-oxygenated. At a median follow-up of 74 months, 16 patients were still alive among 28 available for survival analysis. When stratifying into hypoxic and well-oxygenated tumours patients with the most hypoxic tumours has a statistically poorer disease-specific and overall survival at 5 years. In conclusion hypoxia was an indicator for both a poorer disease specific and overall survival in human STS but hypoxic tumours were not characterized by mutations in the p53 gene.
...
PMID:Hypoxia in human soft tissue sarcomas: adverse impact on survival and no association with p53 mutations. 1130 56
Recent evidence identified a genetic and functional link between Chk2 kinase and p53 as a candidate genome integrity checkpoint and a
tumour suppressor
pathway. Here we report that in human cells, Chk2 and p53 form protein-protein complexes whose abundance increased upon DNA damage, and whose formation was abrogated through cancer associated mutations in the FHA domain of Chk2, or mutations in the tetramerization domain of p53. Whereas among Li-Fraumeni syndrome families mutations of Chk2 or p53 occur in a mutually exclusive manner, we document that the colon cancer cell line HCT-15 concomitantly lacks functions of both Chk2 and p53, the latter demonstrated by a non-invasive reporter assay monitoring p53-dependent transactivation in live cells. Despite the preserved ability of common cancer-derived
mutant p53
proteins to bind and potentially 'titrate' activated Chk2, the integrity of the S phase checkpoint response to ionizing radiation remained largely intact and dependent on Chk2 in cells with wild-type, mutant, or no p53. These results provide new mechanistic insights into the Chk2-p53 interplay, suggest how mutations in Chk2 may abrogate its
tumour suppressor
function, and indicate that compared with individual defects in either Chk2 or p53, concomitant mutations in both of these cell cycle checkpoint regulators may provide some additional selective advantage to tumour cells.
...
PMID:Functional impact of concomitant versus alternative defects in the Chk2-p53 tumour suppressor pathway. 1157 48
The
tumour suppressor
gene TP53 plays an important role in the regulation of DNA repair, and particularly of nucleotide excision repair. The influence of p53 status on the efficiency of the principal steps of this repair pathway was investigated after UV-C irradiation in the human ovarian carcinoma cell line IGROV-1 (expressing wild-type p53) and in the derived clone IGROV-1/Pt1 (with p53 mutations at codons 270 and 282). Clonogenic survival after UV-C irradiation showed that IGROV-1/Pt1 cells were approximately 2-fold more resistant to DNA damage than parental cells. Modulation of p53 protein levels, cell cycle arrest and apoptosis were induced in UV-irradiated IGROV-1 cells, but not in the p53-mutant cell line. Exposure to UV or cisplatin induced down-regulation of p53-replication protein A (RPA) interaction in parental, but not in IGROV-1/Pt1 cells. However, persistent binding of p53 to RPA did not affect the early steps of DNA repair. In fact, both UV-induced DNA incision and the recruitment of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) to DNA repair sites occurred to a comparable extent in p53-wild type and -mutant cell lines, although PCNA remained associated with chromatin for a longer period of time in IGROV-1/Pt1 cells. Global genome repair, as detected by immunoblot analysis of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers, was not significantly different in the two cell lines at 3 h after UV irradiation. In contrast, lesion removal at 24 h was markedly reduced in IGROV-1/Pt1 cells, being approximately 25% of the initial amount of damage, as compared with approximately 50% repair in parental cells. These results indicate that the presence of
mutant p53
protein and its persistent interaction with RPA do not affect the early steps of nucleotide excision repair in IGROV-1/Pt1 cells. Thus, repair defects in p53-mutant ovarian carcinoma cells may be attributed to late events, possibly related to a reduced removal/recycling of PCNA at repair sites.
...
PMID:UV-induced DNA incision and proliferating cell nuclear antigen recruitment to repair sites occur independently of p53-replication protein A interaction in p53 wild type and mutant ovarian carcinoma cells. 1175 27
The mutation of R273-->H in the p53 core domain (p53-CD) is one of the most common mutations found in human cancers. Although the 273H p53-CD retains the wild-type conformation and stability, it lacks sequence-specific DNA binding, a transactivation function and growth suppression. However, mutating T284-->R in the 273H p53-CD restores the DNA binding affinity, and transactivation and
tumour suppressor
functions. Since X-ray/NMR structures of DNA-free or DNA-bound
mutant p53
-CD molecules are unavailable, the factors governing the loss and rescue of sequence-specific DNA binding in the 273H and 273H+284R p53-CD, respectively, are unclear. Hence, we have carried out molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the wild-type, single mutant and double
mutant p53
-CD, free and DNA bound, in the presence of explicit water molecules. Based on the MD structures, the DNA-binding free energy of each p53 molecule has been computed and decomposed into component energies and contributions from the interface residues. The wild-type and
mutant p53
-CD MD structures were found to be consistent with the antibody-binding, X-ray and NMR data. The predicted DNA binding affinity and specificity of both
mutant p53
-CDs were also in accord with experimental data. The non-detectable DNA binding of the 273H p53-CD is due mainly to the disruption of a hydrogen-bonding network involving R273, D281 and R280, leading to a loss of major groove binding by R280 and K120. The restoration of DNA binding affinity and specificity of the 273H+284R p53-CD is due mainly to the introduction of another DNA-binding site at position 284, leading to a recovery of major groove binding by R280 and K120. The important role of water molecules and the DNA major groove conformation as well as implications for structure-based linker rescue of the 273H p53-CD DNA-binding affinity are discussed.
...
PMID:Factors governing loss and rescue of DNA binding upon single and double mutations in the p53 core domain. 1191 17
The Pfizer compound CP-31398 has been reported to stabilize the core domain of the
tumour suppressor
p53 in vitro and be an effective anti-cancer drug by virtue of rescuing destabilized mutants of p53. We did not detect any interaction between the p53 core domain and CP-31398 in vitro by a wide range of quantitative biophysical techniques over a wide range of conditions. CP-31398 did not stabilize p53 in our experiments. However, we found that CP-31398 intercalated with DNA and also altered and destabilized the DNA-p53 core domain complex. We analysed by NMR TROSY the interaction of the domain with a DNA oligomer and identified the changes in the complex on the binding of CP-31398. CP-31398 also decreased sequence-specific DNA binding of wild-type p53 and His-273
mutant p53
. CP-31398 had a non-specific toxic effect independent of
mutant p53
expression in several cell lines carrying Tet-regulated
mutant p53
. CP-31398 caused a small increase in MDM-2 expression and a more pronounced p53-independent increase in Bax expression. CP-31398 did, however, induce the PAb1620 epitope (characteristic of native p53) in cells expressing His-175
mutant p53
. This was prevented by cycloheximide, suggesting that any stabilizing action of CP-31398 would have to be on newly synthesized p53. One of the unstable mutants that was reported to have been rescued by CP-31398, R249S, does not bind DNA when folded at lower temperatures.
...
PMID:Characterization of the p53-rescue drug CP-31398 in vitro and in living cells. 1194 95
All neoplasms require angiogenesis and resulting neovascularity for growth beyond 1 mm(2). Quantitative microvessel density (MVD) has been shown to provide staging and prognostic significance in human prostate cancer (CaP). recently, it has been demonstrated that loss of the wild-type allele of the p53
tumour suppressor
gene results in reduced expression of thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1), a potent inhibitor of angiogenesis. There is also an increased expression of vascular endothelial growth factor which promotes neovascularization. p53 gene mutation and MVD were investigated in men with prostate cancer. Sections from 103 radical prostatectomy cases were evaluated with immunohistochemistry to detect
mutant p53
proteins. Quantitative MVD was performed on the cases exhibiting p53 positive staining and compared with negative fields of similar Gleason grade on the same histologic sections. Twenty of the 103 cases (19.4%) revealed positive p53 staining nuclei. In 19 of these 20 cases, the MVD in p53 positive areas was greater than corresponding control regions (overall P<0.0001). Extent of p53 abnormality, as well as MVD, correlated with pathologic stage. These data suggest that mutations of the p53
tumour suppressor
gene may be associated with increased angiogenesis in CaP. In addition to providing staging and prognostic information, this relationship potentially has therapeutic implications.
...
PMID:The relation of p53 protein nuclear accumulation and angiogenesis in human prostatic carcinoma. 1249 32
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