PMID: 16641528Apr 28, 2006Paper

p53 biological network: at the crossroads of the cellular-stress response pathway and molecular carcinogenesis

Journal of Nippon Medical School = Nippon Ika Daigaku Zasshi
S P Hussain, Cutis C Harris

Abstract

p53 as a key molecular node in the stress response pathway, including inflammation. p53 is involved in several critical pathways including cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, DNA repair, and cellular senescence, which are essential for normal cellular homeostasis and maintaining genome integrity. The alteration of the TP53 gene or posttranslational modification in the p53 protein can alter its response to cellular stress. The molecular archaeology of the TP53 mutation spectrum generates hypotheses concerning the etiology and molecular pathogenesis of human cancer. The spectrum of somatic mutations in the TP53 gene implicates environmental carcinogens, and both endogenous agents and processes in the etiology of human cancer.

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