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Stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression

Tumourigenesis is a multistep process that results from the sequential accumulation of mutations in key oncogene and tumour suppressor pathways. Personalized cancer therapy that is based on targeting these underlying genetic abnormalities presupposes that sustained inactivation of tumour suppressors...

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Autores principales: Feldser, David M., Kostova, Kamena K., Winslow, Monte M., Taylor, Sarah E., Cashman, Chris, Whittaker, Charles A., Sanchez-Rivera, Francisco J., Resnick, Rebecca, Bronson, Roderick, Hemann, Michael T., Jacks, Tyler
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3003305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21107428
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09535
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author Feldser, David M.
Kostova, Kamena K.
Winslow, Monte M.
Taylor, Sarah E.
Cashman, Chris
Whittaker, Charles A.
Sanchez-Rivera, Francisco J.
Resnick, Rebecca
Bronson, Roderick
Hemann, Michael T.
Jacks, Tyler
author_facet Feldser, David M.
Kostova, Kamena K.
Winslow, Monte M.
Taylor, Sarah E.
Cashman, Chris
Whittaker, Charles A.
Sanchez-Rivera, Francisco J.
Resnick, Rebecca
Bronson, Roderick
Hemann, Michael T.
Jacks, Tyler
author_sort Feldser, David M.
collection PubMed
description Tumourigenesis is a multistep process that results from the sequential accumulation of mutations in key oncogene and tumour suppressor pathways. Personalized cancer therapy that is based on targeting these underlying genetic abnormalities presupposes that sustained inactivation of tumour suppressors and activation of oncogenes is essential in advanced cancers. Mutations in the p53 tumour-suppressor pathway are common in human cancer and significant efforts toward pharmaceutical reactivation of defective p53 pathways are underway1–3. Here we show that restoration of p53 in established murine lung tumours leads to significant but incomplete tumour cell loss specifically in malignant adenocarcinomas but not in adenomas. We define amplification of MAPK signaling as a critical determinant of malignant progression and also a stimulator of Arf tumour-suppressor expression. The response to p53 restoration in this context is critically dependent on the expression of Arf. We propose that p53 not only limits malignant progression by suppressing the acquisition of alterations that lead to tumour progression, but also, in the context of p53 restoration, responds to increased oncogenic signaling to mediate tumor regression. Our observations also underscore that the p53 pathway is not engaged by low levels of oncogene activity that are sufficient for early stages of lung tumour development. These data suggest that restoration of pathways important in tumour progression, as opposed to initiation, may lead to incomplete tumour regression due to the stage-heterogeneity of tumour cell populations.
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spelling pubmed-30033052011-05-25 Stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression Feldser, David M. Kostova, Kamena K. Winslow, Monte M. Taylor, Sarah E. Cashman, Chris Whittaker, Charles A. Sanchez-Rivera, Francisco J. Resnick, Rebecca Bronson, Roderick Hemann, Michael T. Jacks, Tyler Nature Article Tumourigenesis is a multistep process that results from the sequential accumulation of mutations in key oncogene and tumour suppressor pathways. Personalized cancer therapy that is based on targeting these underlying genetic abnormalities presupposes that sustained inactivation of tumour suppressors and activation of oncogenes is essential in advanced cancers. Mutations in the p53 tumour-suppressor pathway are common in human cancer and significant efforts toward pharmaceutical reactivation of defective p53 pathways are underway1–3. Here we show that restoration of p53 in established murine lung tumours leads to significant but incomplete tumour cell loss specifically in malignant adenocarcinomas but not in adenomas. We define amplification of MAPK signaling as a critical determinant of malignant progression and also a stimulator of Arf tumour-suppressor expression. The response to p53 restoration in this context is critically dependent on the expression of Arf. We propose that p53 not only limits malignant progression by suppressing the acquisition of alterations that lead to tumour progression, but also, in the context of p53 restoration, responds to increased oncogenic signaling to mediate tumor regression. Our observations also underscore that the p53 pathway is not engaged by low levels of oncogene activity that are sufficient for early stages of lung tumour development. These data suggest that restoration of pathways important in tumour progression, as opposed to initiation, may lead to incomplete tumour regression due to the stage-heterogeneity of tumour cell populations. 2010-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3003305/ /pubmed/21107428 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09535 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Feldser, David M.
Kostova, Kamena K.
Winslow, Monte M.
Taylor, Sarah E.
Cashman, Chris
Whittaker, Charles A.
Sanchez-Rivera, Francisco J.
Resnick, Rebecca
Bronson, Roderick
Hemann, Michael T.
Jacks, Tyler
Stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression
title Stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression
title_full Stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression
title_fullStr Stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression
title_full_unstemmed Stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression
title_short Stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression
title_sort stage-specific sensitivity to p53 restoration during lung cancer progression
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3003305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21107428
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09535
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