Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
CDKN2A (p16INK4A/MTS1) and CDKN2B (p15INK4B/
MTS2
) have recently been shown to be potent inhibitors of the cyclin D/cyclin-dependent kinase-4 complex. Both genes are candidates for the putative
tumour suppressor
genes located at chromosome 9p21 and are frequently inactivated in many human cancers through homozygous deletion. More recently, another reported pathway of inactivation involves loss of transcription associated with de novo methylation of the 5' CpG island of p16/MTS1 and p15/
MTS2
in human cancers. We examined a total of 34 tumours from 30 hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients for deletion, mutation and DNA methylation of these two genes by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification, sequence analysis and Southern blot. Homozygous deletions of P16/MTS1 exon 1 were only identified in 1 of 30 cases (3%). Homozygous deletions of p15 exon 1 or exon 2 were found in 7 of 30 cases (13%). Automated sequencing analysis of p16 exon 1 and 2 and p15 exon 1 and 2 failed to demonstrate mutations in either p16 or p15 in any of these specimens. No aberrant 5' CpG island hypermethylation of p16 or p15 was found in any of the primary tumours by Southern blot. These data suggest that the p16/MTS1 gene has a limited role in HCC. However, deletions of the p15/
MTS2
gene are found in 13% HCC and might be involved in a subset of HCC.
...
PMID:Infrequent mutations and no methylation of CDKN2A (P16/MTS1) and CDKN2B (p15/MTS2) in hepatocellular carcinoma in Taiwan. 989 70
The INK4A/ARF/
INK4B
locus, conserved in mammals, encodes three polypeptides that regulate cell proliferation via the pRb and p53
tumour suppressor
pathways. The locus is mutated in many cancers. The related, tandemly-linked INK4A and
INK4B
genes encode the p16(INK4A) and p15(INK4B) members of the INK4 family of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors which block phosphorylation of pRb, whereas the third product, ARF, derived from an alternative reading frame of INK4A, regulates p53 activity. We assessed the status of this unusual locus in the puffer fish, Fugu rubripes, and identified two INK4 genes using degenerate PCR and hybridization analyses. Sequence conservation and conservation of synteny between human and Fugu predict one gene to be an INK4A or
INK4B
homologue and the other an INK4D homologue. Analysis of the Fugu INK4A/B gene and the surrounding 40-kb of genomic DNA did not reveal the presence of any ARF-encoding potential or another related INK4 gene. We conclude that the gene duplication event that generated adjacent INK4A and
INK4B
genes and the association of ARF with the ancestral INK4A gene occurred after the divergence of the lineage leading to mammals from fish. Thus, unlike mammals, the fish p53 and pRb
tumour suppressor
pathways are not regulated by a single locus.
...
PMID:One INK4 gene and no ARF at the Fugu equivalent of the human INK4A/ARF/INK4B tumour suppressor locus. 1170 76
The
p16
gene belongs to
INK4
family of genes and is made up of four members: p16
INK4A
, p15
INK4B
, p18
INK4C
and p19
INK4D
, all of which share biological properties, namely, inhibition of cell growth and tumour suppression. After
p53
,
p16
is the second most common
tumour suppressor
gene. It has been regarded as the familial melanoma gene. Immunohistochemistry for p16 has a well-defined role in distinct pathological scenarios. It is used to distinguish desmoplastic melanoma from reactive fibrous proliferation, with former showing strong nuclear positivity. In other types of melanoma, p16 protein expression is lost. Spitz nevi show retention of nuclear staining for p16. Benign mesothelial proliferations tend to retain nuclear p16 immunoreactivity, while malignant mesotheliomas lose expression. However,
p16
fluorescent in-situ hybridisation analysis is recommended in the workup of malignant mesothelioma. Another common application of p16 immunohistochemistry is as an indicator for human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and p16 protein is overexpressed in HPV-associated tumours. In this context, p16 immunopositivity should be strong, diffuse, nuclear or nuclear and cytoplasmic in location. Another use for p16 is demonstration of p16 immunopositivity in well-differentiated and dedifferentiated liposarcoma.
...
PMID:
p16
. 3007 91