p53 expression in colorectal tumors.
- 1 April 1991
- journal article
- Vol. 138 (4) , 807-13
Abstract
The expression of the nuclear phosphoprotein p53 was studied immunohistochemically in a series of 150 benign and malignant colorectal tumors. Using monoclonal antibody PAb1801, tumors divided unequivocally into two groups on the basis of immunohistochemistry. Forty of the carcinomas (46.5%) showed positive staining but only 4 of the adenomas (8.7%) were positive (P less than 0.001). The few positive adenomas always showed moderate or severe dysplasia. Metaplastic polyps (n = 9) and small familial adenomatous polyposis-related adenomas (n = 9) were uniformly negative. Carcinomas with p53 expression did not differ from those without in terms of site, differentiation or the prognostic indicators of Dukes' stage, DNA ploidy, or tumor histology. The improved morphologic resolution available in periodate lysine paraformaldehyde dichromate (PLPD)-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue permitted several conclusions to be made: p53 is confined to neoplastic nuclei; staining in positive tumors is heterogeneous and often more marked at the infiltrative margins; and staining intensity is dramatically reduced in mitotic cells. It is concluded that expression of immunohistochemically detectable p53 (probably representing mutated forms of the protein) occurs in some adenomas around the time of transition to carcinoma. Therefore there is an association with the appearance of infiltrative behavior but not with degree of tumor progression (including metastasis) at the time of resection.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mutations in the p53 gene occur in diverse human tumour typesNature, 1989
- Chromosome 17 Deletions and p53 Gene Mutations in Colorectal CarcinomasScience, 1989
- Expression of the nuclear oncogene p53 in colon tumoursThe Journal of Pathology, 1989
- Genetic Alterations during Colorectal-Tumor DevelopmentNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- Prognostic significance of DNA aneuploidy and cell proliferation in rectal adenocarcinomasThe Journal of Pathology, 1987
- Cellular immortalization by a cDNA clone encoding the transformation-associated phosphoprotein p53Nature, 1984
- Participation of p53 cellular tumour antigen in transformation of normal embryonic cellsNature, 1984
- Pathology of colorectal adenomas: a colonoscopic survey.Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1982
- 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