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Publication : An extra copy of <i>p53</i> suppresses development of spontaneous Kras-driven but not radiation-induced cancer.

First Author  Moding EJ Year  2016
Journal  JCI Insight Volume  1
Issue  10 PubMed ID  27453951
Mgi Jnum  J:291684 Mgi Id  MGI:6443120
Doi  10.1172/jci.insight.86698 Citation  Moding EJ, et al. (2016) An extra copy of p53 suppresses development of spontaneous Kras-driven but not radiation-induced cancer. JCI Insight 1(10):e86698
abstractText  The tumor suppressor p53 blocks tumor progression in multiple tumor types. Radiation-induced cancer following exposure to radiation therapy or space travel may also be regulated by p53 because p53 has been proposed to respond to DNA damage to suppress tumorigenesis. Here, we investigate the role of p53 in lung carcinogenesis and lymphomagenesis in LA-1 Kras(G12D) mice with wild-type p53 or an extra copy of p53 (super p53) exposed to fractionated total body irradiation with low linear energy transfer (low-LET) X-rays or high-LET iron ions and compared tumor formation in these mice with unirradiated controls. We found that an additional copy of p53 suppressed both Kras-driven lung tumor and lymphoma development in the absence of radiation. However, an additional copy of p53 did not affect lymphoma development following low- or high-LET radiation exposure and was unable to suppress radiation-induced expansion of thymocytes with mutated Kras. Moreover, radiation exposure increased lung tumor size in super p53 but not wild-type p53 mice. These results demonstrate that although p53 suppresses the development of spontaneous tumors expressing Kras(G12D), in the context of exposure to ionizing radiation, an extra copy of p53 does not protect against radiation-induced lymphoma and may promote Kras(G12D) mutant lung cancer.
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