ROLE OF P53: TUMOR SUPPRESSOR GENE
Sweety Sihag* and Neha Wadhwa
Abstract
The p53 gene like the Rb gene, is a tumor suppressor gene, i.e., its
activity stops the formation of tumors. If a person inherits only one
functional copy of the p53 gene from their parents, they are
predisposed to cancer and usually develop several independent tumors
in a variety of tissues in early adulthood. This condition is rare and is
known as Li-Fraumeni syndrome. However, mutations in p53 are
found in most tumor types and so contribute to the complex network of
molecular events leading to tumor formation. The p53 gene has been
mapped to chromosome 17. In the cell, p53 protein binds DNA, which
in turn stimulates another gene to produce a protein called p21 that
interacts with a cell division-stimulating protein (cdk2). When p21 is
complexed with cdk2 the cell cannot pass through to the next stage of cell division. Mutant
p53 can no longer bind DNA in an effective way and as a consequence the p21 protein is not
made available to act as the 'stop signal' for cell division. Thus cells divide uncontrollably
and form tumors. Help with unraveling the molecular mechanisms of cancerous growth has
come from the use of mice as models for human cancer, in which powerful 'gene knockout'
techniques can be used. The amount of information that exists on all aspects of p53 normal
function and mutant expression in human cancers is now vast, reflecting its key role in the
pathogenesis of human cancers. It is clear that p53 is just one component of a network of
events that culminate in tumor formation.
Keywords: p 53 protein, stop signal, cell divison, gene Knockout.
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