2019
DOI: 10.1002/path.5328
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Intratumour heterogeneity of p53 expression; causes and consequences

Abstract: Genomic alterations in different types of cancer have been identified by comprehensive sequencing methodologies, revealing TP53 as the most frequently mutated gene across the majority of human cancer types. Cytotoxic treatments are still major cancer therapy strategies but cancer recurrence due to therapy resistance is a major challenge. Resistant cell populations may be associated with TP53 mutant clones exhibiting abnormal p53 expression patterns in tumours. Given data that levels of mutant p53 influence can… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 69 publications
(112 reference statements)
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“…Cyclin D1, a member of the Cyclin family and also a proto-oncogene, promotes cell G1/S phase via cdK, thereby promoting cancer development (24)(25)(26). p53 is a tumor suppressor gene located at 17p in human chromosomes and is normally expressed at low levels in the nucleus (27)(28)(29)(30). Mutated p53 genes have been found in various human tumors, including in Hcc (27)(28)(29)(30).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Cyclin D1, a member of the Cyclin family and also a proto-oncogene, promotes cell G1/S phase via cdK, thereby promoting cancer development (24)(25)(26). p53 is a tumor suppressor gene located at 17p in human chromosomes and is normally expressed at low levels in the nucleus (27)(28)(29)(30). Mutated p53 genes have been found in various human tumors, including in Hcc (27)(28)(29)(30).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…p53 is a tumor suppressor gene located at 17p in human chromosomes and is normally expressed at low levels in the nucleus (27)(28)(29)(30). Mutated p53 genes have been found in various human tumors, including in Hcc (27)(28)(29)(30). p53 proteins are involved in several cellular processes, including gene transcription, dna repair, cell cycle, genome stabilization, chromosome segregation, senescence, apoptosis and angiogenesis (27)(28)(29)(30).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The p53 IHC staining was assessed as previously described [63,64]. IHC patterns of wild type p53 is characterized by variable proportions of tumor cell nuclei showing a mixture of negative, weak and strong p53 staining.…”
Section: Immunohistochemistrymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The CY pattern is characterized by diffuse cytoplasmic staining with lack of strong nuclear staining. CA is characterized by absence of nuclear staining of tumor cells but detectable nuclear staining of p53 in non-malignant stromal cells such as fibroblasts and lymphocytes [63,64].…”
Section: Immunohistochemistrymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…TP53 is known to be the most frequently mutated gene across the majority of human cancer types. Therapy resistance to cytotoxic treatments is one of the consequences [21]. In premalignant and malignant tissues, TP53 can be absent in some cells, or over-expressed in others, meaning a heterogeneity of gene expression levels.…”
Section: Oncmentioning
confidence: 99%