(open access 2010) TP53 Mutations in Human Cancers: Origins, Consequences, and Clinical Use Ovarian Cancer and Us OVARIAN CANCER and US Ovarian Cancer and Us

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Thursday, February 28, 2013

(open access 2010) TP53 Mutations in Human Cancers: Origins, Consequences, and Clinical Use



TP53 Mutations in Human Cancers: Origins, Consequences, and Clinical Use

"Genetic variations in the tumor suppressor gene TP53 (OMIM #191117) contribute to human cancers in different ways.
First, somatic mutations are frequent in most cancers (Hollstein et al. 1991). The antiproliferative role of p53 protein in response to various stresses and during physiological processes such as senescence makes it a primary target for inactivation in cancer (Levine 1997). The main modes of TP53 inactivation are single-base substitution and loss of alleles, with inactivation by viral or cellular proteins playing a major role in specific cancers (Tommasino et al. 2003). Second, inheritance of a TP53 mutation causes predisposition to early-onset cancers including breast carcinomas, sarcomas, brain tumors, and adrenal cortical carcinomas, defining the Li-Fraumeni (LFS) and Li-Fraumeni-like (LFL) syndromes (Li et al. 1988; Olivier et al. 2003). Third, TP53 is highly polymorphic in coding and noncoding regions and some of these polymorphisms have been shown to increase cancer susceptibility and to modify cancer phenotypes in TP53 mutation carriers (Whibley et al. 2009).......

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