Adenovirus-mediated Transfer of the p53 Gene Produces Rapid and Generalized Death of Human Glioma Cells via Apoptosis

C Gomez-Manzano, J Fueyo, AP Kyritsis, PA Steck… - Cancer research, 1996 - AACR
C Gomez-Manzano, J Fueyo, AP Kyritsis, PA Steck, JA Roth, TJ McDonnell, KD Steck…
Cancer research, 1996AACR
Wild-type p53 is involved in several aspects of cell cycle control and suppression of
transformation, inducing either apoptosis or G1 block in cell cycle progression. Using a
recombinant adenovirus containing the wild-type p53 cDNA, the biological effects of the
newly expressed wild-type p53 protein were examined in six human glioma cell lines. Three
cell lines (U-251 MG, U-373 MG, and A-172) expressed endogenous mutant p53, and the
other three (U-87 MG, EFC-2, and D54 MG) expressed wild-type p53. The restoration of …
Abstract
Wild-type p53 is involved in several aspects of cell cycle control and suppression of transformation, inducing either apoptosis or G1 block in cell cycle progression. Using a recombinant adenovirus containing the wild-type p53 cDNA, the biological effects of the newly expressed wild-type p53 protein were examined in six human glioma cell lines. Three cell lines (U-251 MG, U-373 MG, and A-172) expressed endogenous mutant p53, and the other three (U-87 MG, EFC-2, and D54 MG) expressed wild-type p53. The restoration of normal p53-encoded protein in the mutant cell lines induced apoptosis as assessed by morphological studies using nuclear staining, electron microscopy, and flow cytometric assays. In wild-type p53 cell lines, however, the overexpression of wild-type p53 did not result in apoptosis but inhibited cellular proliferation rather drastically and modified the neoplastic phenotype. Differential effects suggest two pathways for glioma oncogenesis and a possible therapeutic strategy.
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