AI Article Synopsis

  • The p53 tumor suppressor protein is crucial for preventing cancer, as it is often mutated in human cancers, highlighting its role as a key defense mechanism.
  • p53 operates within a complex network of signaling pathways that include feedback loops with other proteins, notably beta-catenin and Akt, which influence its activity and overall cell fate.
  • Disruption of the balance between p53, Mdm2, beta-catenin, and Akt due to genetic alterations can impair p53's tumor suppressor functions, contributing to cancer development.

Article Abstract

The p53 tumor suppressor protein provides a major anti-cancer defense mechanism, as underscored by the fact that the p53 gene is the most frequent target for genetic alterations in human cancer. Recent work has led to the realization that p53 lies at the hub of a very complex network of signaling pathways that integrate a variety of intracellular and extracellular inputs. Part of this network consists of an array of autoregulatory feedback loops, where p53 exhibits very intricate interactions with other proteins known to play important roles in the determination of cell fate. We discuss two such loops, one involving the beta-catenin protein and the other centering on the Akt/PKB protein kinase. In both cases, the central module is the interplay between p53 and the Mdm2 protein, which inactivates p53 and targets it for rapid proteolysis. Whereas deregulated beta-catenin can lead to Mdm2 inactivation and p53 accumulation, active p53 can promote the degradation and down-regulation of beta-catenin. Similarly, Akt can block p53 activation by potentiating Mdm2, whereas activated p53 can tune down Akt in several different ways. In each case, the actual output of the loop is determined by the delicate balance between the opposing effects of its different components. Often, this balance is dictated by additional signaling processes that occur simultaneously within the same cell. Genetic alterations characteristic of cancer are capable of severely distorting this balance, thereby overriding the tumor suppressor effects of p53 in a manner that facilitates neoplastic conversion.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.2002.tb04669.xDOI Listing

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