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1.
OBJECTIVES: Infection with the high-risk strain of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) and the inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene p53 through mutation are important factors in cervical carcinogenesis. To know whether such events would occur in cervical carcinomas of Indians, 43 tumors (consisting of 36 of stage III B and 6 of stage II B) were screened for p53 and p16 gene mutations. METHODS: PCR followed by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis were used to detect mutations in p53 and p16 genes and PCR for the presence of human papillomavirus genome. HPV status was ascertained by PCR amplification of parts of E6 and E7 genes using primers pU-1M and pU-2R and typing was carried out by restriction analysis. RESULTS: Of the 43 samples analyzed, 4 samples (9%) showed mobility shifts for p53 mutations; PCR products of the p16 gene did not show band shifts in SSCP analysis. HPV DNA was detected in 70% of the 43 samples analyzed: HPV 16 in 23 cases (53%), HPV 18 in 4 cases (13.3%), and HPV 33 in 1 case (3.3%). Two amplified HPV DNAs that were difficult to type with various restriction enzymes were cloned and the amplified regions were sequenced. One of these was 93% close to HPV 35 and the other was 80% close to HPV 58. Three samples had both p53 mutations and HPV genome. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that HPV 16 infection was more common than HPV 18, the p53 mutations and HPV infection were not mutually exclusive events in the genesis of carcinoma of uterine cervix among Indian women, and p16 gene may not play a role in Indian cervical carcinomas.  相似文献   

2.
Five cases of adenoid basal carcinoma (ABC) of the uterine cervix were examined for the presence of p53 tumor suppressor gene, K-ras-2 oncogene, and human papillomavirus (HPV). A topographic genotyping approach was used to search for point mutations in K-ras-2 (exon 1 and 2) and p53 (exons 5 to 8) in archival formalin-fixed tissue blocks. Minute target sites were selected from polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplified and directly sequenced tissue sections. Tissue sections were additionally subjected to immunohistochemical staining for p53 and WAF-1 protein. Because wild type p53 induces WAF-1 gene expression, immunohistochemical staining for WAF-1 protein using monoclonal antibodies may serve as an indirect means to test for p53 mutational damage. Mutational genotype was compared to histopathologic features and immunohistochemical staining. To study the role of HPV, L1 region consensus primers were used to amplify topographic samples, followed by HPV genotyping by direct sequencing and comparison to known viral strains. ABC was found to contain HPV in all cases, proven by genotyping to be HPV type 16 in each case. The virus showed no evidence of genomic variation from prototype HPV type 16 in the L1 segment examined. No K-ras-2 point mutations were identified. p53 immunopositivity was present in all tumors, being weak and focal in 4 and strong and diffuse in 1. WAF-1 immunostaining was positive in two tumors showing weak focal p53 immunopositivity. The single strong and diffuse p53 immunopositive tumor was negative for WAF-1 and was shown to contain a missense p53 point mutation (exon 7-codon 248 tryptophan). In conclusion, ABC is characterized by the presence of HPV type 16. K-ras-2 point mutation appears to play no role in the development of this tumor. p53 gene alterations are common including wild type hyperexpression (weak focal p53 immunopositivity, WAF-1 positivity, no mutational change) and p53 point mutational damage.  相似文献   

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Forty-two oral squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) were analysed for p53 mutations and human papillomavirus (HPV) infection to examine the prevalency of these factors and correlation with apoptotic index (AI; number of apoptotic cells per 100 tumour cells) of the tumour tissue. In polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-Southern blot analysis, HPV DNAs were detected from 22 out of 42 SCCs (52%) with predominance of HPV-16 (68%). p53 mutations in exons 5-8, screened by nested PCR-single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis, were observed in 16 of 42 tumours (38%). The state of the p53 gene did not show any correlation with HPV infection. The terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labelling (TUNEL) method was used for detection of apoptotic cells. The mean AI was 2.35, ranging from 0.31 to 6.63. SCCs associated with p53 mutation had significantly lower AI than those without p53 mutation (P < 0.01), whereas no difference in AI was found between SCCs with and without HPV infection. The results of this study confirmed that HPV infection and/or p53 mutations are implicated, but are not mutually exclusive events, in carcinogenesis of oral SCC and also showed that decrease in apoptosis is more closely related to p53 mutation than HPV infection.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Mutation of the p53 tumor suppressor gene is the most commonly found genetic alteration in human cancer. The E6 gene product of human papillomavirus (HPV) 16 and 18 can inactivate the p53 protein by promoting its degradation. Because most HPV-positive cervical carcinoma cell lines contain wild-type p53 whereas HPV-negative cell lines have point mutations in the p53 gene, a major role in the development of HPV-negative cervical cancer has been attributed to p53. Recent studies, however, have observed no consistent presence of p53 mutation in HPV-negative primary cervical carcinomas. The MDM2 oncogene, which forms an autoregulatory loop with the wild-type p53 protein, has been found amplified in a high percentage of human sarcomas, thus abolishing the antiproliferative function of p53. METHODS: Forty-three primary cervical carcinomas and 10 autopsy-derived distant metastases from one patient were examined for p53 mutation and MDM2 amplification. These tumors had been selected from 238 cervical cancers that had been HPV-typed by Southern blot hybridization and polymerase chain reaction as a representative sample for their HPV status and their clinicopathologic characteristics. Seventeen of the cases had a remarkably good or poor clinical outcome. Human papillomavirus DNA sequences had been detected in 30 of these 43 primary tumors and 13 were negative for HPV by both methods. p53 mutation in the highly conserved exons 5-8 was studied by single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and direct sequencing. MDM2 amplification was analyzed by Southern blot hybridization. RESULTS: Only two missense point mutations and one nucleotide sequence polymorphism were detected: a TAC-->TGC transition in codon 234 in exon 7, resulting in a Tyr-->Lys substitution, a CGT-->TGT transition in codon 273 in exon 8, resulting in an Arg-->Cys substitution and a polymorphism (CGA-->CGG) in codon 213 in exon 6. Both tumors revealing the point mutations were HPV-negative carcinomas. Amplification of the MDM2 gene was observed in 1 of the 53 specimens tested. CONCLUSIONS: In contrast to data derived from cultured cervical carcinoma cell lines and primary sarcomas, these results indicate that p53 mutation and amplification of the MDM2 oncogene are rare even in HPV-negative primary cervical carcinomas. However, to the authors; knowledge, this is the first observation of MDM2 amplification in humans outside sarcomas and neuroepithelial tumors.  相似文献   

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In order to reveal whether differences in the type and site of p53 gene mutations influence the function of the gene and tumor phenotype, we examined nuclear accumulation of the p53 protein immunohistochemically, loss of the other p53 allele by restriction-fragment-length polymorphism analysis, and histological grade of atypia in 52 breast-cancer tissue specimens in which the position and pattern of the mutation were identified. When mis-sense point mutations or deletions of 3n bases (n = 1, 2, ...), which did not cause a frameshift downstream, occurred within codons 110-180 or 234-285, containing highly conserved regions, the p53 protein was almost always (92%) accumulated in nuclei in a majority of the cancer cells. When these mutations occurred outside these regions, only 46% of the cases showed nuclear accumulation of the protein in a majority of cancer cells. In tumors with non-sense point mutations or deletion of 3n + 1 or 3n + 2 bases (n = 0, 1, 2, ...), which caused a downstream frameshift, nuclear accumulation of the p53 protein was absent in 93% of cases. Irrespective of the mutation site or pattern, a majority of cases showing p53 mutation revealed loss of heterozygosity on 17p13 (83%), which suggested they do not carry wild-type p53 allele, and the highest histological grade of atypia (90%). Regardless of differences in their protein-expression pattern, a majority of the p53 gene mutations were suggested to function in a recessive mode and to be involved in the development of histologically aggressive breast cancer.  相似文献   

8.
We analyzed allelic loss at the p53 gene (17p13) and at chromosome region 9p21 in 35 primary head and neck squamous cell carcinomas. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at p53 and 9p21 was found in 50 and 75% of informative cases, respectively. LOH at the p53 gene did not increase significantly with tumor stage, but was more frequent in moderately and poorly differentiated tumors than in well-differentiated tumors. LOH plus mutation or homozygous deletion of p53 was limited to advanced stage and poorly differentiated tumors. Allelic loss at 9p21 is frequent in early stage head and neck squamous cell carcinoma and is not significantly associated with LOH at p53. The second exon of the p16/MTS1/CDKN2 gene was found to be homozygously deleted in 1 of 19 cases showing LOH at 9p21, but direct sequencing did not show mutations in the remaining 18 cases. This suggests that p16 plays a limited role in the development of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma.  相似文献   

9.
Recent studies have shown that p53 mutations are frequently found in cancer of the head and neck, whereas others have indicated that human papilloma virus (HPV) infection may be involved. Thus far, no studies have examined both p53 and HPV in the same patient population and correlated the results with clinical characteristics and outcome. The purpose of this study was to examine any interrelationship between p53 and HPV in patients with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the head and neck. We also planned to correlate the experimental findings with clinical characteristics, known risk factors, and treatment outcome to determine whether any prognostic factors could be detected. Archival material from 66 patients with SCC of the head and neck were selected for study based on the availability of tissue from the primary tumors prior to treatment. A data base was constructed containing all clinical parameters at the time of diagnosis and risk factors. Genomic DNA was isolated and amplified using PCR, followed by SSCP analysis and direct genomic sequencing of all variants to detect p53 mutations. Two independent methods were used for HPV detection: (a) PCR amplification using primers homologous to the E6 region of HPV 16, 18, and 33, followed by RFLP analysis; and (b) PCR amplification with HPV L1 consensus primers, followed by triple restriction enzyme digestion. The results were entered into the data base for statistical analysis. Twenty-four percent of patients were found to have p53 mutations, and 18% were positive for HPV infection. Only one patient was positive for both. Tonsilar cancer was strongly correlated with HPV (P = 0.0001) and inversely correlated with p53 (P = 0.03). The only clinical parameter associated with p53 mutation was a trend toward a heavier smoking history. A subset analysis of the patients with tonsilar cancer revealed inverse correlations with smoking (P = 0. 015) and alcohol use (P = 0.05). Also, white patients with SCC of the tonsil were more likely to be HPV positive (P = 0.015). No significant relationships with outcome were detected with either p53 or HPV in the entire population. A subset analysis of patients with stage IV disease revealed that HPV infection was correlated with overall survival. This is the largest study to date to examine both p53 and HPV in patients with SCC of the head and neck. Our results suggest that HPV may be involved in the development of these cancers in patients without traditional risk factors and that HPV-related cancers are more prevalent in the white race.  相似文献   

10.
In this study we compared the frequency and pattern of p53 mutations in 34 bladder tumors from people with high-level occupational exposure to arylamines to those in 30 bladder tumors from people without such exposure. No differences were observed for p53 mutations between the two groups. The frequency of mutation was similar at 47% for arylamine-exposed individuals and 53% for unexposed individuals and showed a similar pattern of mutation, with GC to AT transitions accounting for the majority of the mutations in both groups. This finding suggests that arylamine exposure does not leave a mutational "footprint" in the p53 gene. However, compared to other tumors, bladder tumors from both exposed and unexposed individuals had a high frequency of multiple mutations and it is interesting that these mutations were highly concordant. We suggest that one explanation of this pattern of mutations could be from decreased DNA repair fidelity within tumor cells. The frequency of mutation in p53 is closely linked to tumor grade and stage and so may be a late event in the development of bladder tumors.  相似文献   

11.
Human basal cell cancer (BCC) has unique growth characteristics with virtual inability to metastasize. We investigated clonality and genetic progression using p53 mutations as marker. Sampling was done through microdissection of frozen immunohistochemically stained 16 microm slices of tumors. From 11 BCC tumors 78 samples were analysed. Direct DNA sequencing of exons 5-8 was performed, haplotypes were determined after cloning of p53 exons and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) ascertained by microsatellite analysis. All tumors had p53 mutations and in a majority both p53 alleles were affected, commonly through missense mutations. Microdissection of small parts (50-100 cells) of individual tumors showed BCC to be composed of a dominant cell clone and prone to genetic progression with appearance of subclones with a second and even third p53 mutation. Samples from normal immunohistochemically negative epidermis always showed wild type sequence, except for a case of previously unknown germline p53 mutation. Our analysis also included p53 immunoreactive patches i.e. morphologically normal epidermis with a compact pattern of p53 immunoreactivity. Mutations within those were never the same as in the adjacent BCC. This detailed study of only one gene thus uncovered a remarkable heterogeneity within a tumor category famous for its benign clinical behavior.  相似文献   

12.
Mutations of the p53 tumor suppressor gene occur frequently in a variety of adult-onset tumors, including colon, breast, lung, and brain, yet are infrequently identified in pediatric malignancies. Wilms' tumor, a common solid tumor of childhood, can be associated with mutations of the WT1 gene. Alterations of the p53 gene have been shown to modulate the ability of WT1 to transactivate its targets. Although positive p53 immunostaining has been demonstrated in Wilms' tumors, the correlation to p53 gene mutations is not clear. We examined Wilms' tumor samples for p53 mutations utilizing polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and single-strand DNA sequencing. Mutations in the coding region of the p53 gene were demonstrated in 2 of 21 (9.5%) Wilms' tumors. Each mutation yielded a substitution of amino acid residues. One mutation was located in exon 6 and the other in exon 7. Both mutations were found in tumors from patients with advanced stage disease. Focal anaplasia was demonstrated in one of these tumors. Our data suggest that although p53 mutations occur infrequently in Wilms' tumor, they may be associated with advanced disease.  相似文献   

13.
To investigate the molecular mechanism of gastric carcinogenesis, we analyzed genetic instability and p53 gene mutations in 40 primary gastric carcinomas. Tumor samples were from untreated patients with no family history suggestive of genetic predisposition to cancer. We screened six microsatellite loci by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method, and exons 5-8 of the p53 gene by the PCR-based denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and sequencing techniques. Microsatellite instability was detected in 32.5% (13/40), and gene mutations in 40% (16/40), of the tumors analyzed. No statistically significant associations were found between genetic alterations and clinico-pathological variables (with the exception of diffusion of lymph node metastases, which was inversely associated with the presence of microsatellite alterations; P < 0.01). Interestingly, a negative association was found between genetic instability and p53 gene mutations: 11 out of 13 tumors showing instability proved to carry a nonmutated p53 gene versus 2/13 carrying a mutated gene (P = 0.03). These observations suggest that genetic instability and p53 gene mutations play a crucial role in the gastric carcinogenic process, but likely act through distinct pathways during cancer development. However, genetic instability is not in and of itself neoplastic. Therefore, we investigated whether insertion/deletion mutations of the polyadenine tract within the transforming growth factor-beta type II receptor gene (TGF-beta RII) were frequently present in gastric tumors with an RER+ (replication error) phenotype. We found RII mutations in 8/40 (20%) samples: mutations were present in 7/13 (54%) RER+ tumors versus 1/27 (4%) RER- cases (P < 0.001).  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Alterations of the p53 gene are involved in the development of diverse human malignancies, but their incidence and clinicopathologic features are still not well characterized for endometrial carcinoma. METHODS: To investigate the clinicopathologic significance of p53, mutations and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in endometrial carcinoma in 92 patients with this disease were examined. RESULTS: Mutations of p53 were detected in 20 (22%) of the 92 patients with carcinoma, and LOH was detected in 23 (32%) of the 72 patients in whom heterozygosity of the gene was available. There was a significant correlation between the occurrence of mutation and LOH. Mutations and LOH were more frequent in patients with Grade 3 tumors than in those with Grades 1 and 2 tumors (P = 0.0498, P = 0.0051, respectively). Patients with LOH had a poorer postoperative survival than those without LOH (P = 0.0022, log-rank test), and patients with both LOH and mutation showed the worst prognosis (P < 0.0001, log rank test). Loss of heterozygosity of the p53 gene showed a significant relation to prognosis that was independent of tumor stage, histologic grade, and muscular invasion. CONCLUSIONS: Mutation and LOH of the p53 gene are prognostic indicators in patients with endometrial carcinoma, suggesting that alterations of p53 may play an important role in the development of this cancer.  相似文献   

15.
Analyses were performed on livers and hepatocellular carcinomas from male Fischer 344 rats fed a choline-devoid diet, to assess whether they carried alterations of the p53 tumor suppressor gene. The analyses consisted of immunoperoxidase staining of tissue sections with monoclonal antibodies to p53, Western blotting and cDNA sequencing. Immunostaining revealed the presence of mutant p53 proteins in 22/27 tumors analyzed and immunoblotting in 18/20. Immunochemical evidence was obtained that occurrence of the mutations precedes tumor development. cDNA sequencing was performed on 11 hepatocellular carcinomas that expressed mutant p53 gene proteins. Seven were found to contain point mutations within the 120-290 codon region of the gene, and one a microdeletion in the same region. No mutational hot spot was observed. It is concluded that mutations within the p53 gene, along with a c-myc gene amplification previously detected in these tumors, most likely contribute to the neoplastic transformation of liver cells in this nutritional model of hepatocarcinogenesis. The results are discussed also in view of recent literature on the presence of p53 mutations in human hepatocellular carcinomas.  相似文献   

16.
The presence of numerous chromosomal changes and point mutations in tumors is well established. At least some of these changes play a role in the development of the tumors. It has been suggested that the number of these genetic changes requires that tumorigenesis involves an increase in mutation rate. However, the presence of numerous changes can also be accounted for by efficient selection. What is required to settle the issue is some measure of nonselected mutations in tumors. In order to determine whether the tumor suppressor TP53 (coding for the protein p53) is hypermutable at some stage of carcinogenesis, the frequency of silent and multiple mutations in this gene has been examined. Silent mutations make up approximately 3% of the total recorded but constitute 9.5% of the mutations found in tumors with multiple mutations. Multiple closely linked mutations are also observed. Such multiple mutations suggest the operation of an error-prone replication process in a subclass of cells. The published data indicate that TP53 is hypermutable at some stage of tumor development. It is not yet clear whether TP53 is unique or whether other genes display a similar pattern of silent and multiple mutations.  相似文献   

17.
India has one of the world's highest incidences of oral cancer. It is believed that the widespread habit of betel quid chewing is an important risk factor as it exposes the oral mucosa to known carcinogens. It also induces physical abrasions, which may create mitogenic environments during wound healing as gateways for infections. A recent study from our laboratories identified human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA, mostly of the high-risk types HPV-16 and HPV-18, in 67 of 91 oral cancer lesions from a cohort of Indian patients consisting mostly of betel quid users. This suggested a viral etiology of some lesions but tumorigenesis in the absence of viruses in other lesions. Here, we examined whether the p53 gene, whose function is abrogated by the product of the HPV gene E6, would be mutated in those oral cancers that were free of HPV DNA, and we found point mutations at known hot spots for mutational alteration of p53 in 4 of 23 lesions. We also considered the possibility that p21, a target of regulation by the p53 protein, may be mutationally altered in tumors with a functional p53 gene. While we did not identify mutations in the p21 gene, 6 of 11 lesions contained a polymorphism that may be associated with cancer. Interestingly, 3 of 23 lesions had mutations in the p16 gene, a third regulator of the cell cycle which is frequently mutated in melanoma but rarely in other cancers, with 1 lesion even having a mutation in the p53 as well as in the p16 gene. Our data point to p53 and p16 as gene targets of oral carcinogenesis, with chemicals in the betel quid possibly functioning in these tumors as carcinogens.  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Mutations in p53, a tumor suppressor gene located on chromosome 17p, are the most frequent genetic alterations found in human cancers. Increased intracellular concentration of p53, which is frequently but not systematically related to p53 mutation, has been proposed to be associated with poor prognosis in some tumor types. In colorectal cancer, this significance is still a matter of debate. To directly investigate the relationship between prognosis and p53 mutation, this study screened a series of 85 colorectal carcinomas for mutations in exons 5-8 of this gene. METHODS: Polymerase chain reaction-amplified products from tumor DNA were analyzed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and direct DNA sequencing. RESULTS: Forty-four tumors were found to be mutated (52%). A strong correlation between the presence of a mutation and short survival was observed (P = 0.003). When tumors were classified according to their histological stage, a multivariate Cox model analysis showed that p53 mutation, rather than 17p allelic loss (previously proposed to convey prognostic information), was retained as the only independent prognostic factor (relative risk, 2.25; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-4.80; P < 0.029). CONCLUSIONS: Combined with staging, direct monitoring of p53 mutation improves prognostic accuracy for colorectal cancer.  相似文献   

19.
Alterations of the p53 gene and the p53 protein are common in a wide spectrum of human malignancies. In several tumor types, p53 gene mutation and/or p53 protein overexpression correlate with a more clinically aggressive phenotype as judged by worse patient survival. This has not been clearly demonstrated to be the case in colorectal cancer. Herein, we report results of the prognostic significance of p53 protein accumulation and gene mutation in a large series of colorectal cancers (n = 541) with long patient follow-up (mean, 87 months). The large majority of patients (95%) received no postoperative systemic adjuvant therapy. The incidence of p53 accumulation detected by immunohistochemistry with the monoclonal antibody DO-7 was 30%, whereas the incidence of p53 gene mutation in exons 5-8 detected using PCR-single strand conformation polymorphism was 36%. Accumulation of p53 protein was associated with improved patient survival independent of tumor stage or grade (hazard ratio, 0.66; 95% confidence interval, 0.47-0.93; P = 0.017). A marked difference was observed depending on the location of the tumor: tumors originating in the distal colon showed a strong association between the presence of p53 accumulation and improved patient survival (P = 0.003), but this was not the case for those located in the proximal colon. Dukes' stage C tumors, but not stage B, also showed an association between p53 accumulation and better outcome (P = 0.013). Mutation of the p53 gene was associated with a trend toward improved survival, particularly in the distal tumors. Our results demonstrate that in some tumor types, the presence of p53 abnormalities can correlate with better prognosis.  相似文献   

20.
Immunohistochemical expression of mutant p53 protein and human papillomavirus (HPV) 16 and 18 related E6 oncoprotein was studied in 36 biopsy proved anal cancers. Mutant p53 was detected in 61.1% cases. HPV 16 and 18 E6 protein was expressed in 22.2% cases, all of which were squamous cell carcinomas. Coexpression of both mutant p53 and E6 protein was found in only 5 cases (13.8%). In HPV 16/18 positive anal tumors, the degradation of p53 is accelerated by viral E6 oncoprotein. In HPV negative tumors, however, other mutagenic factors probably play a role in carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

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