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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||||||||||||||
![]() Annals of the New York Academy of SciencesVolume 910 Issue COLORECTAL CANCER: NEW ASPECTS OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY AND THEIR CLINICAL APPLICATIONS, Pages 121 - 139 Published Online: 25 Jan 2006 © 2010 The New York Academy of Sciences
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 4443K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking The p53 Tumor Suppressor Gene: From Molecular Biology to Clinical Investigation Copyright 2000 New York Academy of Sciences ABSTRACTAbstract: The tumor suppressor p53 is a phosphoprotein barely detectable in the nucleus of normal cells. Upon cellular stress, particularly that induced by DNA damage, p53 can arrest cell cycle progression, thus allowing the DNA to be repaired; or it can lead to apoptosis. These functions are achieved, in part, by the transactivational properties of p53, which activate a series of genes involved in cell cycle regulation. In cancer cells bearing a mutant p53, this protein is no longer able to control cell proliferation, resulting in inefficient DNA repair and the emergence of genetically unstable cells. The most common changes of p53 in human cancers are point missense mutations within the coding sequences of the gene. Such mutations are found in all major histogenetic groups, including cancers of the colon (60%), stomach (60%), breast (20%), lung (70%), brain (40%), and esophagus (60%). It is estimated that p53 mutations are the most frequent genetic event in human cancers, accounting for more than 50% of cases. One of the most striking features of the inactive mutant p53 protein is its increased stability (half-life of several hours, compared to 20 min for wild-type p53) and its accumulation in the nucleus of neoplastic cells. Therefore, positive immunostaining is indicative of abnormalities of the p53 gene and its product. Several studies have shown that p53 mutations are associated with short survival in colorectal cancer, but the use of p53 as a tumoral marker is still a matter of debate. |
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