Serum anti-p53 in relation to mutations across the entire translated p53 gene in colorectal carcinomas
- PMID: 11494027
Serum anti-p53 in relation to mutations across the entire translated p53 gene in colorectal carcinomas
Abstract
Previous reports have claimed that antibodies to mutated p53 protein indicate poor outcome in malignant disease. The mechanism behind this highly specific process is unclear, although it has been claimed that certain DNA alterations are prone to induction of immune response, since wild-type p53 is almost never immunogenic. The aim of the present analysis was to evaluate whether the presence of anti-p53 was statistically significantly related to any certain DNA alterations in the entirely expressed p53 gene in primary tumors of colorectal cancer. P53 serum antibodies were determined by an enzyme linked immunosorbant assay (ELISA). P53 antibodies were detected in serum of 24 of 88 patients (27%). Twenty-two of 24 (92%) sero-positive patients had mutations in their p53 gene while only 22 of 64 (34%) sero-negative patients had p53 mutations (p<0.01). Mutations were mainly missense with a trend to significantly higher frequency of deletions in sero-negative patients compared to sero-positive subjects (8/25, 32% and 2/22, 9% respectively, p<0.08). Mutations in sero-positive patients were mainly located in exon 5 and 7 and within conserved regions (17 of 22 mutations). In sero-negative patients missense mutations were usually located in exon 5, 7 and 8 being also most frequently located within conserved regions. Most of the p53 deletions in sero-negative patients were however located outside conserved regions (seven of eight deletions). There was no statistical difference between sero-positive and negative patients concerning the spectrum of mutations along the expressed gene. Our study demonstrates that p53 antibodies are usually related to p53 gene mutations but a mutational event is not sufficient to elicit self-immunization. Cellular protein binding to p53 or individual differences of major histocompatibility complex based presentation of p53 protein sequences by immune cells is therefore the most likely explanation between sero-negative and sero-positive patients.
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