| Literature DB >> 32079237 |
Katarzyna A Roszkowska1, Slawomir Gizinski1, Maria Sady1, Zdzislaw Gajewski1, Maciej B Olszewski1.
Abstract
Forty years of research has proven beyond any doubt that p53 is a key regulator of many aspects of cellular physiology. It is best known for its tumor suppressor function, but it is also a regulator of processes important for maintenance of homeostasis and stress response. Its activity is generally antiproliferative and when the cell is damaged beyond repair or intensely stressed the p53 protein contributes to apoptosis. Given its key role in preventing cancer it is no wonder that it is the most frequently mutated gene in human cancer. Surprisingly, a subset of missense mutations occurring in p53 (gain-of-function) cause it to lose its suppressor activity and acquire new functionalities that turn the tumor suppressor protein into an oncoprotein. A solid body of evidence exists demonstrating increased malignancy of cancers with mutated p53 in all aspects considered "hallmarks of cancer". In this review, we summarize current findings concerning the cellular processes altered by gain-of-function mutations in p53 and their influence on cancer invasiveness and metastasis. We also present the variety of molecular mechanisms regulating these processes, including microRNA, direct transcriptional regulation, protein-protein interactions, and more.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; gain-of-function; invasiveness; metastasis; p53; review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32079237 PMCID: PMC7072881 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21041334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Summary of literature on EMT-related phenotypes presented in the current work that are regulated by mutated p53, with proposed molecular mechanisms.
| Reference | p53 Variant | Phenotype | Molecular Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| (Godfrey et al., 2018) [ | R172H | Invasiveness | miR-142 downregulation by Dnmt1-mediated DNA hypermethylation |
| (Kogan-Sakin et al., 2011) [ | R175H | EMT induction | TWIST1 upregulation |
| (Ali et al., 2014) [ | R175H | Increased cellular mobility, decreased apoptosis, chemoresistance | KLF17 sequestration |
| (Dong et al., 2013) [ | R175H | EMT induction | miR-130b repression, (miR130b-ZEB1 axis) |
| (Ji et al., 2015) [ | R175H | Activation of pro-oncogenic signaling | Selective Smad3 binding, Smad2/3 imbalance |
| (Weissmueller et al., 2014) [ | R175H | Metastasis | PDGFRB upregulation through p73/NF-Y |
| (Shakya et al., 2017) [ | R175H, R248Q, R273H | Invasiveness | A1AT upregulation |
| (Cooks et al., 2018) [ | R175H, R248W, R273H | Tumor growth | Macrophage reprograming by exosomes with miR-1246 |
| (Tanaka et al., 2018) [ | G245D | Invasiveness | FOXO3a downregulation |
| (Nielsen et al., 2013) [ | R248Q | Metastasis, invasiveness | p63 sequestration, (miR-155 upregulation) |
| Vogiatzi et al., 2016) [ | R248W, R273H, R280K | Tumor progression and metastasis | Endoplasmic Reticulum UDPase ENTPD5 upregulation |
| (Tan et al., 2015) [ | R273H | Cell survival and anoikis resistance | AKT-dependent suppression of BCL2-modifying factor (BMF) |
| (Chryplewicz et al., 2019) [ | R273H | Metastasis, invasiveness, migration | APA6 downregulation, leading to LPA accumulation |
| (Subramanian et al., 2015) [ | R273H | Metastasis, invasiveness | let-7i downregulation |
| (Datta et al., 2019) [ | R273H | Metastasis | miR-132 and miR-147b |
| (Zhao et al., 2019) [ | R273H | Cell migration, chemoresistance, proliferation | lnc273-31 and lnc273-34 upregulation |
| (Ju et al., 2019) [ | R273H | EMT induction | Exosomes containing miR-21 and miR-769 increased TGF-β production in fibroblasts |
| (Adorno et al., 2009) [ | R280K | Cell migration, | SMAD2/3, Ras |
Summary of literature on inflammation- and chemokine-related phenotypes presented in the current work that regulated by mutated p53, with proposed molecular mechanisms.
| Reference | p53 Variant | Phenotype | Molecular Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| (Zhang et al., 2018) [ | R172H | Metastasis | CXCL5-MAPK signaling pathway upregulation by PLAC8 (onzin) |
| (Yan & Chen, 2009) [ | R175H | Chemoresistance | Direct CXCL1 upregulation |
| (Yeudall et al., 2012) [ | R175H, R273H | Cell motility, metastasis | CXCL5, CXCL8 and CXCL12 upregulation by NF-κB |
| (Vaughan et al., 2012) [ | R175H, R273H | Increased motility and invasiveness | Receptor protein tyrosine kinase AXL upregulation |
| (Di Minin et al., 2014) [ | R175H, R273H, R280K | Invasiveness, inflammation | DAB2IP inhibition |
| (Fontemaggi et al., 2009) [ | R175H, R273H, R280K | Neoangiogenesis | CXCL8 and CXCL1 upregulation by E2F1 |
| (Cooks et al., 2013) [ | R248W | Chronic inflammation- invasiveness, metastasis | NF-κB activation by TNF-α |
| (Rahnamoun et al., 2017) [ | R273H | Cancer-promoting gene expression | NF-κB |
| (Rahnamoun et al., 2018) [ | R273H | Invasiveness | MMP9 and CCL2 upregulation by MLL4 |