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p73, Long Lost Cousin of  p53 Tumor Suppressor Gene 

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence 



BOSTON (August 22, 1997)- The discovery of a long-lost cousin to the p53 tumor suppressor gene, called p73, could be an important new piece in the cancer puzzle. 

The p53 gene, found on chromosome 17, is mutated in 60% of human cancers and is known to be an essential player in tumor development.  Now an international team of rsearchers report the discovery of a gene that closely resembles p53. Called p73, the gene is deleted in at least one type of cancer and resides in an area of the genome that researchers have long suspected to harbor tumor suppressor genes. 

The  similarity of p73 to its famous relative, as well as other findings, make it an intriguing gene, says Frank McKeon, associate professor of cell biology at Harvard Medical School, who conducted this study with Daniel Caput of the pharmaceutical company Sanofi Recherche in Labege Cedex, France. Caput discovered p73 by luck, while researching growth factors called cytokines. He then linked up with McKeon, an expert in the area of DNA replication and cell division. 

The researchers knew they were on to something because the gene resides in the very tip of chromosome 1. This area is missing in many cancers, including those of the skin, colon, breast and liver, as well as neuroblastoma, a childhood cancer that while relatively rare has yielded much insight into the molecular workings of cancer cells. 

"P73 lies in one of the most interesting hot spots for putative tumor suppressors," says McKeon. "This has been a suspicious area for cancer for a long time." He cautions, however, that this danger zone probably contains many genes and that only future work will clarify if and how p73 contributes to disease. 

While it has long been known that the tip of chromosome 1 is missing in these cancers, researchers wonder why affected people cannot compensate for the loss simply by using genes on their second chromosome 1. McKeon, Caput, and colleagues do not fully understand this paradox, but they found that the p73 gene gets expressed from one chromosome only, possibly that of the mother. This finding suggests that having one faulty copy of p73 might suffice to lose all function. It also forges a connection to the separate field of genetic imprinting, which studies why and how organisms permanently "silence" certain genes just because they derive from a particular parent. 

The research suggests a possible approach to future treatments: trying to awaken a silenced gene may prove easier than trying to supply a damaged gene by gene therapy, says McKeon. 

The structure of p73 is similar to p53. It contains important he core binding region of the gene enabling the p53 protein to bind DNA, to stick to other p53 proteins, and to activate particular genes. p73 also contains the ten amino acids that are most frequently mutated in p53, predisposing the carrier to cancer. Finally, p73 behaves like p53 in some of the experimental tests routinely used to study tumor suppressor genes. 

However, there are also important differences. Unlike p53, p73 does not respond when the cell's DNA sustains damage from ultraviolet light, the researchers report. This is important because the major function of p53 that is currently known is to sense DNA damage and put the cell cycle on hold while enzymes restore the DNA. If the damage is irreparable, p53 commits the cell to destroy itself. These functions have earned p53 the sobriquet "guardian of  the genome," and p73's failure to react to DNA damage suggests that its main functions lie elsewhere, McKeon says. 

McKeon's group is now laboring to produce a knock-out mouse with the p73 gene missing. Early results suggest that p73 acts in the development of the brain and the immune system. By contrast, mice lacking p53 show almost no embryological defects. 

Researchers also need to determine what p73 does. They want to know what role p73 plays in the gradual process that scientists believe leads from an initial disturbance of the cell's internal controls through a series of exacerbating mutations to full-blown, metastatic cancer. 

The research appears in the August 22, 1997 issue of  Cell.


 
Related information on the Internet
AE: Molecular Biology of Cancer
AE: New p53 Test 
 

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