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P53 Gene Mutations Are Not Required for Early Dissemination of Cancer Cells

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Specialty Science
Date 1999 Jun 9
PMID 10359818
Citations 10
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Abstract

The p53 protein is involved in several central cellular processes, including gene transcription, DNA repair, cell cycling, genomic stability, chromosomal segregation, senescence, and apoptosis. p53 mutations frequently result in an immunocytochemically detectable accumulation of the p53 protein in tumor cells. To evaluate whether p53 gene mutations are required for the onset of hematogeneous tumor cell dissemination, we compared the p53 status of primary and micrometastatic tumor cells. Disseminated carcinoma cells could be detected in bone marrow aspirates obtained from 46 (40%) of 114 patients with various types of epithelial tumors without overt skeleton metastases. There was no correlation between the detection of p53 protein in primary lung carcinomas and the presence of tumor cells in bone marrow. Further analyses revealed that the disseminated carcinoma cells rarely accumulate mutated p53 protein and that 10 cell lines derived thereof did not harbor p53 mutations even in the presence of such mutations in the autologous primary tumors. These observations indicate that tumor cells can leave the primary tumor before mutations of the p53 gene occur and that these mutations are not essential for such early hematogeneous dissemination of cancer cells. Thus, the value of mutated p53 as a target for diagnosis and treatment of micrometastatic disease in cancer patients is questionable.

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