Comprehensive mutational analysis and mRNA isoform quantification of TP63 in normal and neoplastic human prostate cells Journal Article


Authors: Parsons, J. K.; Saria, E. A.; Nakayama, M.; Vessella, R. L.; Sawyers, C. L.; Isaacs, W. B.; Faith, D. A.; Bova, G. S.; Samathanam, C. A.; Mitchell, R.; De Marzo, A. M.
Article Title: Comprehensive mutational analysis and mRNA isoform quantification of TP63 in normal and neoplastic human prostate cells
Abstract: BACKGROUND. The role of TP63 in cancer remains controversial since both oncogenic and tumor suppressive actions have been reported. p63 protein is found in the nuclei of basal cells of the normal prostate, yet it is absent in the vast majority of prostate cancer nuclei. Since a complex array of TP63 mRNA transcripts encode polypeptides with distinct functional properties, it is important to determine which forms are expressed in normal and prostate cancer tissue. METHODS. We used real-time RT-PCR to distinguish TP63 mRNA isoforms in prostate cancer cell lines (n = 7), and samples from prostate cancer patients. We sequenced all TP63 exons from 20 primary tumors, 20 metastases, 28 tumor xenografts, and 7 prostate cancer cell lines. RESULTS. TP63 mRNA isoforms were present in all tumors, albeit at levels lower than in normal prostate. The most abundant N-terminal variant was DN; the most abundant C-terminal variant was the a form. The prostate tumor cell line CWR22Rv1 contained a single G to T substitution in exon 8 that is identical to a dominant-negative DNA binding inactivation mutation occurring in patients with a congenital TP63 deficiency syndrome. One patient tumor contained a somatic mutation in exon 11. CONCLUSIONS. The pattern of TP63 mRNA expression in normal prostate tissue is retained in reduced amounts in prostate cancer, and a potentially functional TP63 mutation was identified in one prostate tumor. Thus, if TP63 is a prostate cancer gene it likely functions as a tumor suppressor. Further study of the role of TP63 isoformsin regulating stemcell functions of normal and neoplastic prostate epithelial cells is needed. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords: clinical article; controlled study; human tissue; protein expression; gene mutation; human cell; somatic mutation; exon; genetics; exons; comparative study; adenocarcinoma; metabolism; amino acid substitution; carboxy terminal sequence; tumor xenograft; pathology; cell line, tumor; prostate cancer; prostatic neoplasms; oncogene; tumor suppressor gene; prostate; amino terminal sequence; diagnostic agent; xenograft; messenger rna; rna, messenger; nucleotide sequence; transactivator protein; prostate tumor; tumor suppressor proteins; tumor cell line; transplantation, heterologous; protein p63; trans-activators; dna mutational analysis; dna binding; tumor suppressor protein; isoprotein; protein isoforms; mrna; p63; tp63; tp63 protein, human; tp63 gene
Journal Title: Prostate
Volume: 69
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0270-4137
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons  
Date Published: 2009-04-01
Start Page: 559
End Page: 569
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/pros.20904
PUBMED: 19142959
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2875878
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 3" - "Export Date: 30 November 2010" - "CODEN: PRSTD" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Charles L Sawyers
    225 Sawyers