» Articles » PMID: 11146550

Differential Gene Expression in Mouse Mammary Adenocarcinomas in the Presence and Absence of Wild Type P53

Overview
Journal Oncogene
Date 2001 Jan 9
PMID 11146550
Citations 14
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The tumor suppressor p53 transcriptionally regulates a large number of target genes that may affect cell growth and cell death pathways. To better understand the role of p53 loss in tumorigenesis, we have developed a mouse mammary cancer model, the Wnt-1 TG/p53 model. Wnt-1 transgenic females that are p53-/- develop mammary adenocarcinomas that arise sooner, grow faster, appear more anaplastic, and have higher levels of chromosomal instability than their Wnt-1 transgenic p53+/+ counterparts. In this study, we used several assays to determine whether the presence or absence of p53 affects gene expression patterns in the mammary adenocarcinomas. Most of the differentially expressed genes are increased in p53+/+ tumors and many of these represent known target genes of p53 (p21WAF/C1P1, cyclin G1, alpha smooth muscle actin, and cytokeratin 19). Some of these genes (cytokeratin 19, alpha smooth muscle actin, and kappa casein) represent mammary gland differentiation markers which may contribute to the inhibited tumor progression and are consistent with the more differentiated histopathology observed in the p53+/+ tumors. Several differentially expressed genes are growth regulatory in function (p21, c-kit, and cyclin B1) and their altered expression levels correlate well with the differing growth properties of the p53+/+ and p53-/- tumors. Thus, while tumors can arise and progress in the presence of functioning wild type p53, p53 may directly or indirectly regulate expression of an array of genes that facilitate differentiation and inhibit proliferation, contributing to a more differentiated, slow growing, and genomically stable phenotype.

Citing Articles

Dichotomous transactivation domains contribute to growth inhibitory and promotion functions of TAp73.

Li D, Kok C, Wang C, Ray D, Osterburg S, Dotsch V Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024; 121(21):e2318591121.

PMID: 38739802 PMC: 11127001. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2318591121.


p53, Cytokeratin 19 Expression in Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma and Correlation with Histopathologic Grading: An Immunohistochemical Study.

Kaur H, Hazarey V, Sharma G, Gosavi S, Pal R, Gupta V Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2024; 76(1):103-111.

PMID: 38440427 PMC: 10909024. DOI: 10.1007/s12070-023-04092-7.


Ink4a/Arf(-/-) and HRAS(G12V) transform mouse mammary cells into triple-negative breast cancer containing tumorigenic CD49f(-) quiescent cells.

Kai K, Iwamoto T, Kobayashi T, Arima Y, Takamoto Y, Ohnishi N Oncogene. 2013; 33(4):440-8.

PMID: 23376849 PMC: 3957346. DOI: 10.1038/onc.2012.609.


The pathology of EMT in mouse mammary tumorigenesis.

Cardiff R J Mammary Gland Biol Neoplasia. 2010; 15(2):225-33.

PMID: 20521088 PMC: 2886116. DOI: 10.1007/s10911-010-9184-y.


Pea3 transcription factors and wnt1-induced mouse mammary neoplasia.

Baker R, Kent C, Silbermann R, Hassell J, Young L, Howe L PLoS One. 2010; 5(1):e8854.

PMID: 20107508 PMC: 2809747. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0008854.