Role of p53 in Cell Death and Human Cancers
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Abstract
P53 is a nuclear transcription factor with a pro-apoptotic function. Since over 50% of human cancers carry loss of function mutations in p53 gene, p53 has been considered to be one of the classical type tumor suppressors. Mutant p53 acts as the dominant-negative inhibitor toward wild-type p53. Indeed, mutant p53 has an oncogenic potential. In some cases, malignant cancer cells bearing p53 mutations display a chemo-resistant phenotype. In response to a variety of cellular stresses such as DNA damage, p53 is induced to accumulate in cell nucleus to exert its pro-apoptotic function. Activated p53 promotes cell cycle arrest to allow DNA repair and/or apoptosis to prevent the propagation of cells with serious DNA…
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730
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- 1.85
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- 100%
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Transactivation
- DNA damage
- Cancer research
- Cell cycle checkpoint
- Apoptosis
- Cell cycle
- Biology
- DNA repair
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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