Role of p53 in breast cancer progression: An insight into p53 targeted therapy
National University Cancer Institute, Singapore · National University Health System
Abstract
The transcription factor p53 is an important regulator of a multitude of cellular processes. In the presence of genotoxic stress, p53 is activated to facilitate DNA repair, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis. In breast cancer, the tumor suppressive activities of p53 are frequently inactivated by either the overexpression of its negative regulator MDM2, or mutation which is present in 30-35% of all breast cancer cases. Notably, the frequency of p53 mutation is highly subtype dependent in breast cancers, with majority of hormone receptor-positive or luminal subtypes retaining the wild-type p53 status while hormone receptor-negative patients predominantly carry p53 mutations with gain-of-function oncogenic…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.56
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 219
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Breast cancer
- Cancer research
- Mdm2
- Regulator
- Biology
- Cancer
- Transcription factor
- Mutant
- No poverty