PMID: 7523798Oct 1, 1994Paper

Mechanisms of p53 alteration in acute leukemias

Leukemia
A SchotteliusM Lübbert

Abstract

Disruption of normal p53 expression is the most frequent genetic change occurring in various human solid tumors; it is mostly due to sequence alterations of the p53 coding region by missense mutations or to loss of an entire, functional allele of this gene. In the present study, possible mechanisms resulting in a disruption of regulated expression of wild-type p53 were examined in acute leukemias of either lymphoid (ALL) or myeloid (AML) phenotype. p53 transcript accumulation, nucleotide sequence and gene structure were analyzed in primary leukemic cells from 50 patients. p53-specific transcripts were detected in 26/26 cases of ALL and 16/23 cases of AML using reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR. Sequencing of transcripts did not reveal any point mutations or deletions. Heterozygosity at a polymorphic Bg/II site within intron 1 was found in 4/28 leukemic samples, and loss of one allele was noted in one of these. In addition, a novel, leukemia-associated structural abnormality located within the 5' flanking region of the p53 gene and associated with the loss of heterozygosity was observed in cells from this patient with ALL. The MDM2 gene which inactivates p53 by binding to it was neither amplified nor rearranged in 28 leukemias stud...Continue Reading

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