Aberrant expression of p16 in human cancers - a new biomarker?

Cancer Rep Rev

The Department of Pathology, Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Winston-Salem, NC 27157.

Published: March 2018

The and genes are located in the same locus, both showing its tumor suppressive activity. ARF has been shown to detect potentially harmful oncogenic signals, making incipient cancer cells undergo senescence or apoptosis. INK4a, on the other hand, responds to signals from aging in a variety of tissues including islets of Langerhans, neuronal cells, and cancer stem cells in general. It also detects oncogenic signals from incipient cancer cells to induce them senescent to prevent neoplastic transformation. Both of these genes are inactivated by gene deletion, promoter methylation, frame shift, and aberrant splicing although mutations changing the amino acid sequences affect only the latter. Recent studies indicated that polycomb gene products EZH2 and BMI1 repressed p16 expression in primary cells, but not in cells deficient for pRB protein function. It was also reported that that p14 inhibits the stability of the p16 protein in human cancer cell lines and mouse embryonic fibroblasts through its interaction with regenerating islet-derived protein 3γ. Overexpression of INK4a is associated with better prognosis of cancer when it is associated with human papilloma virus infection. However, it has a worse prognostic value in other tumors since it is an indicator of pRB loss. The p16 tumor suppressive protein can thus be used as a biomarker to detect early stage cancer cells as well as advanced tumor cells with pRB inactivation since it is not expressed in normal cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6018005PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.15761/CRR.1000145DOI Listing

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