Abstract
The p53 gene is a recessive oncogene whose loss of function can result in cell transformation. Approximately 25% of human breast cancers contain missense mutations in one p53 allele, leading to inactivation of the mutated protein. In almost all of these cases, the wild-type allele is also lost. However, it remains uncertain whether mutant p53 acts in a dominant negative fashion over the wild-type protein. Two parameters of p53 function, transcriptional activation and transcriptional repression, were studied under a variety of experimental conditions within malignant and normal breast epithelial cells. Transient transfection of DNA encoding wild-type p53 was able to transactivate p53-responsive promoters. Wild-type p53 functioned equally well in malignant cells which harbored an endogenous mutation in p53, in malignant cells containing normal p53 and in normal mammary epithelial cells. Co-transfection of cDNAs encoding mutant p53 proteins were unable to inhibit the ability of wild-type p53 to transactivate the reporter constructs. Repression of viral promoters by normal p53 protein was not inhibited transfected mutant p53 proteins. gene WAF1/CIP1/p21 was induced following gamma irradiation in normal mammary cells, containing endogenous wild-type p53 and in the same cells transfected with mutant p53 genes. From these experiments we conclude that mutant p53 proteins do not inactivate the transactivating (or repressing) function of a co-expressed normal p53 protein in these cells implying that complete loss of wild-type p53 is required to eliminate these functions in breast epithelium.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 1315-1322 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Oncogene |
Volume | 13 |
Issue number | 6 |
State | Published - 1996 |
Keywords
- Transactivation
- Tumor suppressor
- p53
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Molecular Biology
- Genetics
- Cancer Research