4.6 Article

Association of p53 Arg72Pro potymorphism and β-catenin accumulation in mycosis fungoides

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY
Volume 155, Issue 6, Pages 1223-1229

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2133.2006.07527.x

Keywords

apoptosis; beta-catenin; cutaneous T-cell lymphoma; mycosis fungoides; p53; polymorphism

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Background Aberrant activation of beta-catenin contributes to the onset of a variety of tumours. There are many tumours that display beta-catenin accumulation in the absence of mutations in its gene. Recently, abnormal accumulation of wild-type beta-catenin has been associated with mutational inactivation of the p53 tumour suppressor. Objectives To investigate the potential role of p53 and its homologue p63 in beta-catenin deregulation and to correlate this with disease outcome. Methods We analysed a panel of 24 samples of mycosis fungoides (MF), the most frequent manifestation of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL), for beta-catenin, p53 and p63 protein expression by immunohistochemistry. Based on the immunostaining results for beta-catenin protein, 11 positive cases were selected for laser microdissection, genomic DNA isolation and subsequent mutation analysis of beta-catenin exon 3 and p53 exons 4-8. Results Our findings revealed overexpression of beta-catemn, p53 and p63 in 46%, 38% and 17% of cases, respectively. The number of p53-positive cases of MF was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the beta-catenin-positive group (73%). Sequence analysis demonstrated that wild-type beta-catenin accumulation in MF is not associated with mutational inactivation of the p53 gene and, more importantly, our data provide evidence that a common polymorphic form of p53 (Arg72Pro) is significantly associated with beta-catenin overexpression (P < 0.05). No significant differences in the three genotypes were observed between the CTCL cases and the control group, demonstrating that Arg72Pro polymorphism of the p53 gene is not associated with the risk of developing cutaneous lymphomas (P > 0.05). Conclusions We found an association of beta-catenin and p53 overexpression without detection of structural alteration in the genes, suggesting that p53 mutation is not an important mechanism for beta-catenin activation in primary CTCL. Additionally, we speculate that the p53 codon 72 polymorphism may influence negative feedback control involving beta-catenin and p53.

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