Small-molecule MDM2 antagonists reveal aberrant p53 signaling in cancer: Implications for therapy
La Roche College · Roche (Switzerland) · +1 more institution
Abstract
The p53 tumor suppressor retains its wild-type conformation and transcriptional activity in half of all human tumors, and its activation may offer a therapeutic benefit. However, p53 function could be compromised by defective signaling in the p53 pathway. Using a small-molecule MDM2 antagonist, nutlin-3, to probe downstream p53 signaling we find that the cell-cycle arrest function of the p53 pathway is preserved in multiple tumor-derived cell lines expressing wild-type p53, but many have a reduced ability to undergo p53-dependent apoptosis. Gene array analysis revealed attenuated expression of multiple apoptosis-related genes. Cancer cells with mdm2 gene amplification were most sensitive to nutlin-3 in vitro…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.08
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
13Topics & keywords
- Mdm2
- Apoptosis
- Cancer research
- Biology
- Cell cycle checkpoint
- Tumor suppressor gene
- Signal transduction
- Cancer
- Good health and well-being