Tumor suppressor genes
- 5 February 1990
- Vol. 12 (2), 60-66
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.950120203
Abstract
The retinoblastoma sensitivity protein (Rb) and the p53 gene product both appear to function as negative regulators of cell division or abnormal cellular growth in some differentiated cell types. Several types of cancers have been shown to be derived from cells that have extensively mutated both alleles of one or both of these genes, resulting in a loss‐of‐function mutation. In the case of the p53 gene, this mutational process appears to occur in two steps, with the first mutation at the p53 locus resulting in a trans‐dominant phenotype. The mutant p53 gene product enters into an oligomeric protein complex with the wild‐type p53 protein derived from the other normal allele and such a complex is inactive or less efficient in its negative regulation of growth control. This intermediate stage of carcinogenesis selects for the proliferation of cells with one mutant allele, enhancing the probability of obtaining a cancer cell with both alleles damaged. The DNA tumor viruses have evolved mechanisms to interact with the Rb and p53 negative regulators of cellular growth in order to enhance their own replication in growing cells. SV40 and adenovirus type 5 produce viral encoded proteins that also form oligomeric protein complexes with p53 and Rb, presumably inactivating their functions. These viral proteins are also the oncogene products of these viruses. Thus, the mechanisms by which cancer may arise in a host, via mutations or virus infections, have fundamental common pathways effecting the same cellular genes and gene products; Rb and p53.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The murine p53 protein blocks replication of SV40 DNA in vitro by inhibiting the initiation functions of SV40 large T antigenCell, 1989
- Chromosome 17 Deletions and p53 Gene Mutations in Colorectal CarcinomasScience, 1989
- The Human Papilloma Virus-16 E7 Oncoprotein Is Able to Bind to the Retinoblastoma Gene ProductScience, 1989
- Association between an oncogene and an anti-oncogene: the adenovirus E1A proteins bind to the retinoblastoma gene productNature, 1988
- SV40 large tumor antigen forms a specific complex with the product of the retinoblastoma susceptibility geneCell, 1988
- The Approaching Era of the Tumor Suppressor GenesScience, 1987
- A human DNA segment with properties of the gene that predisposes to retinoblastoma and osteosarcomaNature, 1986
- Adenovirus E1b-58kd tumor antigen and SV40 large tumor antigen are physically associated with the same 54 kd cellular protein in transformed cellsCell, 1982
- T antigen is bound to a host protein in SY40-transformed cellsNature, 1979
- Mutation and Cancer: Statistical Study of RetinoblastomaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1971