4.8 Article

Association of p53 gene alterations with the expression of antiapoptotic survivin splice variants in breast cancer

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 290-297

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1209784

Keywords

survivin expression; alternative splicing; p53 status; breast cancer

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Survivin, a member of the inhibitory apoptosis protein family, gives rise, by an alternative splicing, to four variants with different functions. Many experimental studies indicate that p53 can regulate the expression of survivin and some of its splice variants. Although both the expression of survivin splice variants and the p53 gene were frequently altered in human cancers, nothing is known about their interactions in in vivo tumour samples. Here, we report that, in 162 breast carcinomas, p53 mutations are significantly associated with an increased expression of survivin and, in particular, its antiapoptotic splice variants (survivin-Delta Ex3 and survivin-3B). The upregulation of these variant expressions is particularly related to p53 mutations occurring in the residues belonging to the tetramerization domain. The loss of heterozygosity in the p53 gene is also associated with an increased expression of the survivin-Delta Ex3 variant. The expression of the proapoptotic variants (survivin-2B and survivin-2 alpha) is not affected by any of these alterations. Our results provide for the first time in vivo evidence that, in human breast cancer, the survivin expression as well as its splicing depends on the p53 status. The results also suggest that the upregulation of antiapoptotic survivin variant expression by the mutant p53 may increase breast cancer cells survival and resistance to therapy.

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