p53 expression in normal and dysplastic bronchial epithelium and in lung carcinomas
Open Access
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in British Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 70 (2) , 297-303
- https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1994.296
Abstract
Bronchial epithelial dysplasia is thought to be a premalignant stage in the evolution of lung cancers. Using the CM-1 polyclonal antibody, we have examined the expression of the p53 protein in a larger series of bronchial dysplasias (n = 60) than hitherto investigated. The p53 protein was detected in 14% of mild, 25% of moderate and 59% of severe dysplasias; increased p53 expression correlated with the severity of dysplasia. p53-positive dysplasias had greater PCNA indices than p53-negative dysplasias. p53 expression in dysplastic tissues was compared with that in two groups of histologically normal epithelium: 14 bronchial biopsies from non-cancer patients of which all but one were negative and 32 bronchial margins from resected carcinomas, of which 17 showed infrequent solitary cells with p53-positive nuclei in predominantly basal locations scattered throughout the epithelium. These results for resection margins were confirmed by use of a second antibody, DO-1. Sixty-nine per cent of the corresponding carcinomas were p53 positive, but in 15 cases the p53 reactivity differed from resection margins. No correlation between p53 expression and any of the clinicopathological characteristics of these tumours was found. This study supports the observation that abnormal p53 expression may be an early but not obligatory event in malignant transformation in lung.Keywords
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