Publication | Open Access
Deletion of 5'-coding sequences of the cellular p53 gene in mouse erythroleukemia: a novel mechanism of oncogene regulation.
96
Citations
53
References
1987
Year
Oncogene RegulationGenetics5'-Coding SequencesCell DeathMolecular BiologyCancer BiologyTumor BiologyCancer-associated VirusTranscriptional RegulationCell RegulationCellular P53 GeneCancer Cell BiologyCancer ResearchOncogenic AgentP53 Protein MoleculeCancer GeneticsGene ExpressionCell BiologyNatural SciencesTumor SuppressorMedicineP53 GeneP53 Stability
The p53 gene is rearranged in an erythroleukemic cell line (DP15-2) transformed by Friend retrovirus. Here, we characterize the mutation and identify a deletion of approximately equal to 3.0 kilobases that removes exon 2 coding sequences. The gene is expressed in DP15-2 cells and results in synthesis of a 44,000-dalton protein that is missing the N-terminal amino acid residues of p53. The truncated protein is unusually stable and accumulates to high levels intracellularly. Moreover, it appears to have undergone a change in conformation as revealed by epitope mapping studies. This study represents the first description of an altered p53 gene product arising by mutation during neoplastic progression and identifies a region in the p53 protein molecule that plays a role in determining p53 stability in vivo.
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