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Publication : Persistence of p53 mutations and resistance of keratinocytes to apoptosis are associated with the increased susceptibility of mice lacking the XPC gene to UV carcinogenesis.

First Author  Ananthaswamy HN Year  1999
Journal  Oncogene Volume  18
Issue  51 Pages  7395-8
PubMed ID  10602497 Mgi Jnum  J:59014
Mgi Id  MGI:1350780 Doi  10.1038/sj.onc.1203147
Citation  Ananthaswamy HN, et al. (1999) Persistence of p53 mutations and resistance of keratinocytes to apoptosis are associated with the increased susceptibility of mice lacking the XPC gene to UV carcinogenesis. Oncogene 18(51):7395-8
abstractText  Like xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patients, transgenic mice lacking nucleotide excision repair (NER) genes such as XPA and XPC are extremely susceptible to ultraviolet (UV)-induced skin cancer. Because the p53 gene is an important target for UV carcinogenesis and because the p53 protein modulates NER, we investigated the consequences of NER deficiency on UV-induced p53 mutations in XPC-/- mouse skin tumors. Thirty-eight (76%) of 50 UV-induced XPC-/- skin tumor analysed displayed C-->T or CC-->TT transitions at dipyrimidine sites on the untranscribed strand of the p53 gene. A major hot spot for p53 mutation occurred at codon 270, which is also a hot spot in UV-induced skin tumors from NER-proficient C3H and SKH-hr 1 mice. Interestingly, codon 270 mutations were induced in both XPC-/- and +/+ mouse skin after 1 week of UV irradiation, but the mutations persisted only in XPC-/- mouse skin after 3 - 4 weeks of chronic UV. The persistence of UV-induced p53 mutations in XPC-/- mouse skin was associated with decreased apoptosis and increased proliferation of keratinocytes, suggesting that these events may contribute to the accelerated development of UV-induced skin tumors in XPC-/- mice.
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