Literature DB >> 7567946

p53 gene status in endometrial carcinomas showing diffuse positivity for p53 protein by immunohistochemical analysis.

R A Ambros1, J S Ross, B V Kallakury, J Malfetano, Y Kim, J Hwang, K Breese, J Figge.   

Abstract

Although detection of p53 protein by immunohistochemical testing was originally thought to indicate p53 gene mutation, recent analyses of human malignancies have shown that high expression of p53 protein may occur without detectable gene mutation. Several explanations have been proposed for this phenomenon, including mutation out of "hot spot" regions, overexpression of wild-type protein, sampling error in molecular analyses, and conformational changes of wild-type p53 protein. As discussed, it is unlikely that the first two possibilities contribute significantly to the occurrence of this phenomenon, and the current study examined the possibility that sampling error in molecular analyses might account for a lack of concordance between immunohistochemical and molecular analyses. Such a possibility exists because immunohistochemical studies frequently report high expression when staining is only focal or regional and molecular analyses are based on the polymerase chain reaction, which is highly exponential in nature and may not detect mutation if the target gene segment is not amplified early in the chain reaction. In the current report, p53 protein expression was examined by immunohistochemical testing in 45 cases of endometrioid carcinoma, and all cases showing diffuse positivity were then examined by polymerase chain reaction in combination with single-strand conformational analysis for exons 4 to 9 with the use of a microdissection technique to separate malignant from benign cells. Of the 45 cases, diffuse staining was found in four cases, and only two of the four were found to show evidence of gene mutation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7567946

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mod Pathol        ISSN: 0893-3952            Impact factor:   7.842


  4 in total

1.  Intense p53 staining is a valuable prognostic indicator for poor prognosis in medulloblastoma/central nervous system primitive neuroectodermal tumors.

Authors:  R T Woodburn; B Azzarelli; J F Montebello; I E Goss
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 4.130

2.  Germ cell tumors of the testis overexpress wild-type p53.

Authors:  L Guillou; A Estreicher; P Chaubert; J Hurlimann; A M Kurt; G Metthez; R Iggo; A C Gray; P Jichlinski; H J Leisinger; J Benhattar
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 4.307

3.  p53 gene mutations are common in uterine serous carcinoma and occur early in their pathogenesis.

Authors:  H Tashiro; C Isacson; R Levine; R J Kurman; K R Cho; L Hedrick
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  1997-01       Impact factor: 4.307

4.  Intratumoral heterogeneous expression of p53 correlates with p53 mutation, Ki-67, and cyclin A expression in endometrioid-type endometrial adenocarcinomas.

Authors:  Yu-Zhen Feng; Tanri Shiozawa; Akiko Horiuchi; Hsien-Chang Shih; Tsutomu Miyamoto; Hiroyasu Kashima; Akihisa Suzuki; Toshio Nikaido; Ikuo Konishi
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2005-07-14       Impact factor: 4.064

  4 in total

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