| Literature DB >> 34439241 |
Yen-Ting Chiang1, Yi-Chung Chien1,2,3,4,5, Yu-Heng Lin1, Hui-Hsuan Wu1, Dung-Fang Lee6,7,8,9, Yung-Luen Yu1,2,3,4,5,10.
Abstract
Wild-type p53 is known as "the guardian of the genome" because of its function of inducing DNA repair, cell-cycle arrest, and apoptosis, preventing the accumulation of gene mutations. TP53 is highly mutated in cancer cells and most TP53 hotspot mutations are missense mutations. Mutant p53 proteins, encoded by these hotspot mutations, lose canonical wild-type p53 functions and gain functions that promote cancer development, including promoting cancer cell proliferation, migration, invasion, initiation, metabolic reprogramming, angiogenesis, and conferring drug resistance to cancer cells. Among these hotspot mutations, p53-R175H has the highest occurrence. Although losing the transactivating function of the wild-type p53 and prone to aggregation, p53-R175H gains oncogenic functions by interacting with many proteins. In this review, we summarize the gain of functions of p53-R175H in different cancer types, the interacting proteins of p53-R175H, and the downstream signaling pathways affected by p53-R175H to depict a comprehensive role of p53-R175H in cancer development. We also summarize treatments that target p53-R175H, including reactivating p53-R175H with small molecules that can bind to p53-R175H and alter it into a wild-type-like structure, promoting the degradation of p53-R175H by targeting heat-shock proteins that maintain the stability of p53-R175H, and developing immunotherapies that target the p53-R175H-HLA complex presented by tumor cells.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; gain-of-function; immunotherapy; mutant p53; p53 R175H; targeted therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34439241 PMCID: PMC8391618 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13164088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Distribution of TP53 mutations. (a) Distribution of TP53 mutations from the TCGA database. Picture obtained from National Cancer Institute GDC Data Portal; (b) Distribution of TP53 somatic mutations from the IARC TP53 database; (c) Distribution of TP53 germline mutations from the IARC TP53 database; and (b,c) Picture obtained from the IARC TP53 database website (https://p53.iarc.fr/ (accessed on 1 July 2021)).
Top 10 frequently occurring TP53 mutants. Data were obtained from the TCGA database and the IARC TP53 somatic mutations database.
| TCGA Database | IARC | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mutants | Percentage in | Mutants | Percentage in |
| Missense | 3.69% | Missense R175H | 4.21% |
| Missense | 2.88% | Missense R248Q | 3.28% |
| Missense | 2.80% | Missense R273H | 2.97% |
| Missense | 2.25% | Missense R248W | 2.65% |
| Missense | 2.19% | Missense R273C | 2.45% |
| Missense | 2.05% | Missense R282W | 2.10% |
| Stop Gained | 1.78% | Missense G245S | 1.58% |
| Missense | 1.60% | Missense R249S | 1.52% |
| Stop Gained | 1.30% | Missense Y220C | 1.39% |
| Missense | 1.05% | Stop Gained TP53 R213 1 * | 1.14% |
1 * represents the termination codon.
Summary of p53-R175H gain-of-function of inducing genetic instability.
| Tumor Type | Same Function | R175h | Affected Downstream Molecule or Pathway | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pancreatic cancer | - | - | - | [ |
| None (mouse | R248W, R273H | Mre11 | MRN/ATM | [ |
Summary of p53-R175H gain-of-function of promoting cancer cell growth.
| Tumor Type | Same Function | R175H | Affected Downstream | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | R248Q, R248W, R249S, R273H | ETS2 | MLL1, MLL2, MOZ/Global | [ |
| Breast cancer | R248Q, R273H, R280K | NF-Y, YAP | [ | |
| Pancreatic cancer | - | - | hnRNPK/GAP17 isoforms/KRAS signaling pathway | [ |
| Bladder, bone, and ovarian cancer | V157F, 248Q | - | GEF-H1 | [ |
| Colorectal and pancreatic cancer | - | - | GRO1 | [ |
| Breast, colorectal, and lung cancer | R273H | - | CDC7, Dbf4 | [ |
| Breast and prostate cancer | R280K | DAB2IP | PI3K/AKT1 | [ |
Summary of p53-R175H gain-of-function of promoting tumor migration, invasion, and metastasis.
| Tumor Type | Same Function | R175H | Affected Downstream Molecule or Pathway | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | - | p63, Smad2 | p63 target genes | [ |
| Breast cancer | R273H | - | RCP/EGFR and integrin/PI3K/AKT | [ |
| Breast cancer | R273H | - | RCP/Hsp90a secretion | [ |
| Breast cancer | R273H, R280K | HIF-1α | miR-30d/accelerated vesicular trafficking | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | R248W, R273H | SENP1 | Activation of Rac1 by SUMOylation | [ |
| Endometrial cancer | R273H, C135Y | - | miR-130b/ZEB1/Snail/E-cad | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | - | p73 | NF-YA, NF-YB, and NF-YC complex/PDGFRb | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | - | - | Dnmt1/MiR-142-3p | [ |
| Prostate cancer | - | - | BMI-1/Twist1 | [ |
| Breast, lung, and skin cancer | R273H, D281G | - | CXCL5, CXCL8, and CXCL12 | [ |
Summary of p53-R175H gain-of-function promoting tumor initiation and conferring stemness.
| Tumor Type | Same Function | R175H | Affected Downstream Molecule or Pathway | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colorectal cancer | R248W, R273H | - | Stem cell markers CD44, LGR5, and ALDH1 | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | R273H | TCF4 | β-catenin/WNT signaling pathway | [ |
| Leukemia | R248W, R273H | EZH2 | Global increase of H3K27me3 | [ |
| Brain and breast cancer | R273H | - | RCP/EGFR and integrin/PI3K/AKT/WIP/YAP, TAZ | [ |
Summary of p53-R175H gain-of-function of promoting tumor drug-resistance, inflammation, angiogenesis, and metabolic reprogramming.
| Gain-of-Function | Tumor Type | Same Function | R175H | Affected Downstream Molecule or Pathway | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemoresistance | Colorectal cancer | R273H, R248W | NF-Y, p300 | Ephrin-B2/SRC/FAK/ | [ |
| Lung cancer | R273H, D281G | - | NF-κB2 | [ | |
| Lung cancer | - | - | miR128-2/E2F5/p21/pro-caspase-3 | [ | |
| Breast, colorectal, head and neck, and lung cancer | R248W, R273H, R280K, R282W | SMDA3 | REGγ/proteasome | [ | |
| Breast and lung cancer | G245A, D281G, R273H, R280K | - | SLC25A1 | [ | |
| Angiogenesis | Breast cancer | R273H, R280K | E2F1 | ID4/IL8, GRO-α | [ |
| Inflammatory | Colorectal cancer | R273H | - | [ | |
| Breast, colorectal, | R273H, R280K | MAFF | sIL-1Ra/IL-1β | [ | |
| Metabolic | Breast and lung cancer | R248Q, R273H | - | RhoA, ROCK/GLUT1 translocation/Warburg effect | [ |
| Head and neck cancer | P151S, G245C, | AMPK | AMPK inactivation/Warburg effect | [ |
Summary of drugs and strategies targeting p53-R175H for cancer therapy.
| Concept | Strategy | Drug | Other Targeted | Clinical Trial | Phase | Status | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reactivating wild-type p53 function | targeting the cysteine residues of p53 | PRIMA-1 | R273H | - | - | - | [ |
| APR-246 | R273H | NCT03931291 | 2 | Active, not | [ | ||
| NCT04214860 | 1 | Recruiting | |||||
| NCT04383938 | 1, 2 | Recruiting | |||||
| NCT03745716 | 3 | Active, | |||||
| NCT04419389 | 1, 2 | Recruiting | |||||
| NCT03588078 | 1, 2 | Active, | |||||
| NCT03072043 | 1, 2 | Active, | |||||
| MIRA-1 | R273H | - | - | - | [ | ||
| STIMA-1 | R273H | - | - | - | [ | ||
| Stictic acid | - | - | - | - | [ | ||
| KSS-9 | - | - | - | - | [ | ||
| Arsenic trioxide | Structural | NCT04695223 | 2 | Recruiting | [ | ||
| NCT03855371 | 1 | Recruiting | |||||
| NCT03377725 | 3 | unknown | |||||
| NCT04869475 | 2 | Recruiting | |||||
| Other | ZMC1 | - | - | - | - | [ | |
| ReACp53 | R248Q | - | - | - | [ | ||
| Promoting mutant | Targeting the mevalonate pathway | Atorvastatin | Structural | NCT03560882 | 1 | Recruiting | [ |
| NCT04767984 | 2 | Not yet recruiting | |||||
| NCT03358017 | 2 | Recruiting | |||||
| HDAC | SAHA | Broad effect | NCT02042989 | 1 | Active, | [ | |
| Hsp90 | Ganetespib | Broad effect | - | - | - | [ | |
| Immuno- | Bispecific | H2-scDb | - | - | - | - | [ |