Advertisement

Abstract

The therapeutic responsiveness of genetically defined tumors expressing or devoid of the p53 tumor suppressor gene was compared in immunocompromised mice. Tumors expressing the p53 gene contained a high proportion of apoptotic cells and typically regressed after treatment with gamma radiation or adriamycin. In contrast, p53-deficient tumors treated with the same regimens continued to enlarge and contained few apoptotic cells. Acquired mutations in p53 were associated with both treatment resistance and relapse in p53-expressing tumors. These results establish that defects in apoptosis, here caused by the inactivation of p53, can produce treatment-resistant tumors and suggest that p53 status may be an important determinant of tumor response to therapy.

Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.

References

BARDEESY, N, ANAPLASTIC WILMS-TUMOR, A SUBTYPE DISPLAYING POOR-PROGNOSIS, HARBORS P53 GENE-MUTATIONS, NATURE GENETICS 7: 91 (1994).
BIENZ, B, ANALYSIS OF THE GENE CODING FOR THE MURINE CELLULAR TUMOR-ANTIGEN P53, EMBO JOURNAL 3: 2179 (1984).
CLARKE, A.R., REQUIREMENT FOR A FUNCTIONAL RB-1 GENE IN MURINE DEVELOPMENT, NATURE 359: 328 (1992).
DIVE, C, DRUG-TARGET INTERACTIONS - ONLY THE 1ST STEP IN THE COMMITMENT TO A PROGRAMMED CELL-DEATH, BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER 64: 192 (1991).
ELROUBY, S, P53 GENE MUTATION IN B-CELL CHRONIC LYMPHOCYTIC-LEUKEMIA IS ASSOCIATED WITH DRUG-RESISTANCE AND IS INDEPENDENT OF MDR1/MDR3 GENE-EXPRESSION, BLOOD 82: 3452 (1993).
EVAN, G.I., INDUCTION OF APOPTOSIS IN FIBROBLASTS BY C-MYC PROTEIN, CELL 69: 119 (1992).
FUJIWARA, T, INDUCTION OF CHEMOSENSITIVITY IN HUMAN LUNG-CANCER CELLS IN-VIVO BY ADENOVIRUS-MEDIATED TRANSFER OF THE WILD-TYPE P53 GENE, CANCER RESEARCH 54: 2287 (1994).
GAVRIELI, Y, IDENTIFICATION OF PROGRAMMED CELL-DEATH INSITU VIA SPECIFIC LABELING OF NUCLEAR-DNA FRAGMENTATION, JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY 119: 493 (1992).
HOLLSTEIN, M, P53 MUTATIONS IN HUMAN CANCERS, SCIENCE 253: 49 (1991).
HORIO, Y, CANCER RES 53: 11 (1993).
HSIAO, M.H., NONHEREDITARY P53 MUTATIONS IN T-CELL ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC-LEUKEMIA ARE ASSOCIATED WITH THE RELAPSE PHASE, BLOOD 83: 2922 (1994).
JACKS, T, EFFECTS OF AN RB MUTATION IN THE MOUSE, NATURE 359: 295 (1992).
KERR, JFR, APOPTOSIS - ITS SIGNIFICANCE IN CANCER AND CANCER-THERAPY, CANCER 73: 2013 (1994).
LEE, E.Y., MICE DEFICIENT FOR RB ARE NONVIABLE AND SHOW DEFECTS IN NEUROGENESIS AND HEMATOPOIESIS, NATURE 359: 288 (1992).
LOTEM, J, REGULATION BY BCL-2, C-MYC, AND P53 OF SUSCEPTIBILITY TO INDUCTION OF APOPTOSIS BY HEAT-SHOCK AND CANCER-CHEMOTHERAPY COMPOUNDS IN DIFFERENTIATION-COMPETENT AND DIFFERENTIATION-DEFECTIVE MYELOID LEUKEMIC-CELLS, CELL GROWTH & DIFFERENTIATION 4: 41 (1993).
Lowe, S. W., Cell 74: 957 (1993).
LOWE, S.W., ABROGATION OF ONCOGENE-ASSOCIATED APOPTOSIS ALLOWS TRANSFORMATION OF P53-DEFICIENT CELLS, PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 91: 2026 (1994).
LOWE, S.W., unpublished data.
MORGENBESSER, S.D., P53-DEPENDENT APOPTOSIS PRODUCED BY RB-DEFICIENCY IN THE DEVELOPING MOUSE LENS, NATURE 371: 72 (1994).
PELLETIER, J, COMMUNICATION.
SCHEULEN, M.E., TUMOR AND TISSUE PHARMACOKINETICS OF CYTOSTATIC DRUGS IN THE NUDE-MOUSE, STRAHLENTHERAPIE UND ONKOLOGIE 165: 529 (1989).
SYMONDS, H, P53-DEPENDENT APOPTOSIS SUPPRESSES TUMOR-GROWTH AND PROGRESSION IN-VIVO, CELL 78: 703 (1994).
TANAKA, N, CELLULAR COMMITMENT TO ONCOGENE-INDUCED TRANSFORMATION OR APOPTOSIS IS DEPENDENT ON THE TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR IRF-1, CELL 77: 829 (1994).
THORLACIUS, S, SOMATIC P53 MUTATIONS IN HUMAN BREAST CARCINOMAS IN AN ICELANDIC POPULATION - A PROGNOSTIC FACTOR, CANCER RESEARCH 53: 1637 (1993).
WU, X.W., P53 AND E2F-1 COOPERATE TO MEDIATE APOPTOSIS, PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 91: 3602 (1994).

(0)eLetters

eLetters is a forum for ongoing peer review. eLetters are not edited, proofread, or indexed, but they are screened. eLetters should provide substantive and scholarly commentary on the article. Embedded figures cannot be submitted, and we discourage the use of figures within eLetters in general. If a figure is essential, please include a link to the figure within the text of the eLetter. Please read our Terms of Service before submitting an eLetter.

Log In to Submit a Response

No eLetters have been published for this article yet.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Science
Volume 266 | Issue 5186
4 November 1994

Submission history

Published in print: 4 November 1994

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

Scott W. Lowe
Center for Cancer Research and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Stephan Bodis
Joint Center for Radiation Therapy and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Andrea McClatchey
Center for Cancer Research and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Lee Remington
Center for Cancer Research and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
H. Earl Ruley
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232, USA.
David E. Fisher
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and The Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
David E. Housman
Center for Cancer Research and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Tyler Jacks
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Center for Cancer Research, and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Article Usage

Altmetrics

Citations

Cite as

Export citation

Select the format you want to export the citation of this publication.

Cited by

  1. β-Endorphin mediates radiation therapy fatigue, Science Advances, 8, 50, (2022)./doi/10.1126/sciadv.abn6025
    Abstract
Loading...

View Options

Check Access

Log in to view the full text

AAAS ID LOGIN

AAAS login provides access to Science for AAAS Members, and access to other journals in the Science family to users who have purchased individual subscriptions.

Log in via OpenAthens.
Log in via Shibboleth.

More options

Purchase digital access to this article

Download and print this article for your personal scholarly, research, and educational use.

Purchase this issue in print

Buy a single issue of Science for just $15 USD.

View options

PDF format

Download this article as a PDF file

Download PDF

Media

Figures

Multimedia

Tables

Share

Share

Share article link

Share on social media